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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Toceranib phosphate treatment for pancreatic cancer in dogs

By Musser, Margaret L & Johannes, Chad M·Published in BMC veterinary research·2021·College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Toceranib phosphate (Palladia) for the treatment of canine exocrine pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

Species:
dog
Behaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old mixed breed dog was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and treated with a medication called toceranib phosphate (Palladia). This treatment was well-tolerated, and among the dogs treated, 75% showed some clinical benefit, with one dog experiencing a partial response and two others maintaining stable disease for over 10 weeks. The average survival time for these dogs was about 89.5 days, although some lived much longer. While this study involved a small number of dogs, it suggests that toceranib may help dogs with pancreatic cancer, but more research is needed to confirm these findings.

People also search for: dog pancreatic cancer treatment · toceranib for dogs · canine cancer survival rates

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Canine pancreatic carcinoma is a rare, aggressive tumour that is often diagnosed late in the course of disease. Effective treatment strategies have been elusive, and overall survival time is short. In humans, treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors alone, or in combination with IV gemcitabine, have been moderately effective. As canine and human pancreatic carcinomas share many clinical aspects, strategies that mimic human treatment regimens may confer a better outcome in canine patients. The aim of this study was to assess the role of the veterinary tyrosine kinase inhibitor, toceranib phosphate, in the treatment of cytologically or histologically confirmed canine pancreatic carcinomas. RESULTS: Retrospectively, medical records of dogs with confirmed pancreatic carcinoma treated with toceranib were reviewed. Eight dogs were identified that fit the inclusion criteria. Toceranib was well-tolerated by all patients. Six were treated in the gross disease setting. Four had image-based evaluation of clinical benefit (complete response, partial response, or stable disease of > 10 weeks). Of those patients, 1 achieved a partial response, 2 stable disease, and 1 had progressive disease, for an overall clinical benefit rate of 75 %. An additional dog had clinically stable disease that was not confirmed via imaging. The toceranib-specific median overall survival time was 89.5 days (range: 14-506 days). CONCLUSIONS: Although limited in patient number, this small study suggests that toceranib may have biologic activity in dogs with pancreatic carcinoma. Larger, prospective studies are needed to confirm these preliminary results and define the use of toceranib in the microscopic disease setting.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34380474/