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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with feline leukemia treated for acute erythroleukemia

By Da Sol Park et al.·Published in Veterinary Medicine and Science·2022·College of Veterinary Medicine Chungnam National University Daejeon Korea, GB·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Treatment of acute erythroleukaemia with high‐dose cytarabine in a cat with feline leukaemia virus infection

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 4-year-old female cat with feline leukemia virus (FeLV) was brought in showing signs of poor appetite, fever, lethargy, and severe anemia. After testing positive for FeLV, she was diagnosed with acute erythroleukaemia, a rare type of cancer. The veterinarian treated her with a high-dose chemotherapy drug called cytarabine over five days. While her symptoms and anemia improved initially, she sadly passed away 16 days later due to shock. This case highlights the challenges of treating this aggressive cancer in cats, as the treatment did not ultimately save her life.

People also search for: cat leukemia treatment · feline erythroleukaemia symptoms · cytarabine for cats

Abstract

Abstract Erythroleukaemia is a malignant neoplasm of the erythroid lineage that rarely occurs in cats. It is associated with the feline leukaemia virus (FeLV), and owing to the poor prognosis, treatment is rarely reported. A 4‐year‐old female Korean domestic shorthair cat was presented with hyporexia, fever, lethargy, severe anaemia and rubricytosis. An FeLV antigen test was positive, but a subsequent polymerase chain reaction test was negative. Serum biochemistry analysis results were normal, except for slightly elevated alanine aminotransferase. The patient was tentatively diagnosed with acute erythroleukaemia, and single high‐dose (600 mg/m2) cytarabine chemotherapy was administered via constant rate infusion for 12 h a day for 5 days. After the first cytarabine administration, the clinical signs and anaemia improved, though no change was noted to other haematological parameters. The patient died of shock 16 days after the second cytarabine administration; the total survival time after diagnosis was 67 days. Post‐mortem cytological evaluation of bone marrow aspiration revealed that the myeloid/erythroid ratio was 0.49, the erythroid progenitor cells were 64% of all nucleated cells and the blast cells were 84% of the non‐erythroid cells. Histopathology images indicated that the spleen was diffusely expanded by atypical round cells, possibly erythroid precursors. This is the first case report on the prognosis and effects of high‐dose cytarabine chemotherapy for acute feline erythroleukaemia with FeLV infection. Although the clinical signs improved, the treatment was not effective. Further studies on erythroleukaemia chemotherapy protocols are required.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.646