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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Side effects of temozolomide and doxorubicin in cats with tumors

By Gagnon, Jerome et al.Ā·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgeryĀ·2012Ā·VCA Berwyn Animal Hospital, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Treatment-related toxicities in tumor-bearing cats treated with temozolomide alone or in combination with doxorubicin: a pilot assessment.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with tumors were treated with a chemotherapy drug called temozolomide, either alone or with another drug, doxorubicin. While some cats showed improvement, with two achieving complete remission, there were serious side effects. Four cats had severe reactions leading to euthanasia, including issues like low blood cell counts and fluid buildup around the lungs and heart. Due to these high toxicity levels, further treatment plans were halted, even though some cats responded well to the medication. More research is needed to understand these toxic effects better.

People also search for: cat tumor treatment side effects Ā· temozolomide for cats Ā· cat chemotherapy complications

Abstract

A retrospective study assessing treatment-related toxicities in tumor-bearing cats treated with temozolomide (TMZ) alone or in combination with doxorubicin was conducted. TMZ was administered orally once a day for 5 days every 3 weeks at a dose of 20 mg/cat. Tumor response was evaluated with standard World Health Organization criteria and toxicity was monitored using veterinary co-operative oncology group-common terminology criteria for adverse events (VCOG--CTCAE) criteria. Ten tumor-bearing cats with various types of malignancies were treated with TMZ-based chemotherapy. Eight cats were evaluable for response. Two cats achieved a complete response, one achieved stable disease and five achieved a partial response. Four grade III and one grade IV hematological toxicities, and one grade IV gastrointestinal toxicity were observed. Four cats were euthanased as a result of apparent toxicity. One cat was euthanased as a result of severe and prolonged myelosuppression with fever. Three were euthanased for grade III pleural and pericardial effusions. Effusion was seen in cats treated with higher cumulative dose of TMZ (P = 0.0046). Planned additional case accrual was discontinued because of unacceptable levels of toxicity despite evidence of efficacy in some of the cats. Additional investigation is needed to elucidate this unexpected apparent cumulative toxicity.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22496148/