College of Veterinary Medicine

Research in Veterinary Clinical Sciences

Canine Lymphoma In Vivo Chemotherapy Assay


Purpose of the Study

The goal of this study is determine the ability of a novel microneedle tumor injection device to correctly identify drug response in either chemotherapy naïve or Madison-Wisconsin (CHOP) based chemotherapy resistant canine lymphoma patients. If successful, these findings will be used to develop future prospective trials for customized chemotherapy regimens for lymphoma patients in both dogs and in humans with newly diagnosed and resistant lymphoma.  

Lymphoma is the most common canine hematopoietic malignancy, with the most common form characterized by generalized lymphadenopathy (multicentric form).  Multi-agent combination chemotherapy such as those in Madison-Wisconsin or "CHOP"-based protocols (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) is currently considered the standard of care with response rates of 60-90%; median survival of just over 1 year, and 20% surviving 2 years of longer. Long term control of this cancer is rarely achieved due to multi-drug resistance either at the beginning or eventual development during course of therapy. New approaches to treatment of this uniformly fatal tumor are needed.  

A better understanding of tumor-specific chemotherapy resistance profiles prior to therapy has the potential to improve patient treatment outcomes while minimizing exposure to chemotherapeutics that have no benefit. A micro needle drug array device has been developed as a potential in vivo (in patient) chemotherapy assay. The device delivers a panel of chemotherapeutics in a specific spacial and geometric pattern directly into solid tumors 1-3 days prior to surgical biopsy.  Histopathologic markers for cell proliferation and apoptosis then allow qualitative assessment of tumor sensitivity or resistance to selected chemotherapeutics. A prototype device has been used in clinical canine patients here at WSU Oncology service since early 2012.  In this trial, we will be using a novel tumor injection device to predict resistance to standard chemotherapy drugs of the Madison-Wisconsin / CHOP-based protocol in two groups of clinical canine patients: a group with naïve lymphoma that have never been treated with chemotherapy, and a group with naturally occurring lymphoma that have clearly documented clinically relapsed or failed initial chemotherapy with all drugs in the protocol. By proving that this micro needle device array is a viable in vivo technique for identification of specific chemotherapy resistance in dogs, this would provide a reason to explore further studies such as prospective tailored chemotherapy regimens for canine patients and provide further framework for pilot studies in humans to help improve patient survival and reduce unnecessary side effects from ineffective chemotherapy drugs.

Patient Entry Criteria

Dogs with lymphoma will be divided into two treatment groups: chemotherapy naïve or resistant.

Group 1 (Naïve lymphoma): Dogs with newly diagnosed multicentric lymphoma (confirmed via cytology or histopathology.  These patients will not have received any previous cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs (including prednisone) or any other supplements that are purported to treat cancer.

Group 2 (Refractory-resistant lymphoma): Dogs with multicentric lymphoma (B or T cell phenotype) previously confirmed on cytology or histopathology.  These patients will have been previously treated at least once with each of the drugs in the Madison-Wisconsin (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) based chemotherapy protocol and have either failed initial induction by week 4 of treatment or relapsed and become refractory to the same drugs documented by records of progressive disease.  The last dose of chemotherapy must be at least 1 week prior to the study to allow clearance of previously administered cytotoxic drugs.  Patients must have a popliteal lymph node of at least 2cm in diameter (minimum size for needle array administration).  No other herbal supplements or anti-tumor chemotherapeutics can be given while in this 24-72 hour test period.

Financial Incentives

All costs associated with the microneedle array trial will be covered (anesthesia, tumor injection, 24 hour boarding, popliteal lymph node biopsy, tissue analysis for chemotherapy sensitivity/resistance; $500-700), cytology and histopathology of the lymph node including immunohistochemistry to identify specific lymphoma phenotype (B or T cell; $150), oncology consultation ($102) and complete blood tests (complete blood count, biochemistry, urinalysis, blood smear; $120). Total value $870-1200. For naïve patients the clinical benefits are: portion of staging procedures at no cost (histopathology, cytology, immunophenotyping of lymphoma, blood tests) and potential to identify ineffective drugs prior to administration of the CHOP-based chemotherapy protocols.

Owner Responsibilities

In resistant lymphoma cases dogs must be brought for examination and will undergo the initial injections.  If the patient is taken home they must return for the scheduled lymph node removal 24-72 hours later.  After removal of the node there is no further obligation but we will be happy to help guide further therapy.  

In Naïve lymphoma cases, the same is true for the injection procedure.  If it is desired to go forward with chemotherapy, clients are responsible for remaining lymphoma staging procedures (thoracic radiographs, abdominal ultrasound and aspirates, bone marrow aspiration and additional imaging if required) that would usually cost an additional $500-600 at WSU, and to pay for the multi-agent chemotherapy, but recheck exams are free as is the data obtained from the chemotherapy assay. These chemotherapy appointments can be performed either at WSU Oncology (typically $2500-3500 spread over 6 months of chemotherapy for a 70-80Lb dog) or coordinated with your local veterinarian if possible. It is highly desirable that once beginning therapy, owners of naïve patients go forward with chemotherapy administration to correlate clinical response to that predicted by the tumor injection assay. A physical examination, complete blood count, and precise lymph node measurements should be performed weekly for the first 4 weeks of the chemotherapy protocol and if a positive response is seen, these rechecks may be then followed up with your local veterinarian if possible.

Contact Information

If interested please contact Betsy Wheeler or Pam Thompson at the WSU VTH 509-335-0711.

Last Edited: Oct 09, 2012 6:05 PM


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