Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Radiation therapy for aortic body tumors in dogs - 6 cases
By Maeda, A et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2021·Department of Veterinary Medicine, Japan·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy for canine aortic body tumour: 6 cases (2014-2019).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with aortic body tumors received three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy to treat their condition. Out of eight dogs, six completed the treatment, with one showing a complete response and another a partial response, while the remaining four had stable disease. Some dogs experienced mild side effects related to their lungs and skin, but these were generally self-limiting. Overall, the tumors in these dogs gradually shrank without regrowth over the follow-up period, suggesting that this type of radiation therapy can be effective for treating aortic body tumors in dogs.
People also search for: dog aortic body tumor treatment · canine radiation therapy side effects · dog cancer treatment options
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the feasibility of three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy for canine aortic body tumours. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Medical records of dogs that had undergone three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy with presumptive diagnosis of aortic body tumour were reviewed for clinical characteristics, treatment modality and outcomes. RESULTS: Eight dogs were diagnosed with aortic body tumour and were treated with three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy. One dog had proliferation of a mass in the right atrium during treatment and died of respiratory distress. Another dog did not undergo follow-up CT to evaluate the treatment response due to the increased blood urea nitrogen values. The remaining 6 dogs were included in the case series. Radiotherapy was performed using a median dose per fraction of 7 Gy (3.3-7.14 Gy), a median of seven divided doses (7-15) and a total median dose of 49 Gy (45-50 Gy). The median number of CT scans during the follow-up period was 5 (range: 3-8 times). CT revealed acute side effects in four dogs-grade 1 effects related to the lung (n = 4) and skin (n = 2). Self-limiting or asymptomatic late side effects (grade 1 lung-related effect) were observed in three dogs. After therapy, one dog demonstrated a complete response, another demonstrated a partial response and the disease remained stable in four animals. The median follow-up period was 514.5 (235-1219) days. After three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy, the aortic body tumour reduced gradually over time without regrowth in all these 6 dogs. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: In this small case series, aortic body tumours responded to three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy. Transient and self-limiting side effects of the treatments were common. Further controlled studies are required to prove the effectiveness and the safety of this intervention.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33300156/