Hematological and blood biochemistry parameters as prognostic indicators of survival in canine multicentric lymphoma treated with COP and L-COP protocols
Somchin Sutthigran, Phasamon Saisawart, Patharakrit Teewasutrakul, Sirintra Sirivisoot, Chutimon Thanaboonnipat, Anudep Rungsipipat, Nan Choisunirachon

TL;DR
This study shows that blood parameters like monocyte count and albumin levels can predict survival in dogs with lymphoma undergoing specific chemotherapy protocols.
Contribution
The study identifies specific pre- and post-treatment blood parameters as prognostic indicators for survival in dogs with high-grade multicentric lymphoma.
Findings
Monocytosis at pre-treatment is linked to shorter survival in dogs treated with COP.
Azotemia and hypoalbuminemia are associated with reduced survival in dogs treated with L-COP.
Leukocytosis at 4 weeks post-treatment correlates with shorter survival in lymphoma dogs.
Abstract
Hematological and blood chemistry parameters are crucial for evaluating and monitoring canine multicentric lymphoma during chemotherapy. Pre-treatment hematological and blood chemistry parameters can be used as prognostic survival outcomes for this disease. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effect of hematological and blood chemistry parameters pre-treatment and 4 weeks post-treatment on the survival outcomes of dogs treated with either a combination of cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisolone (COP) or a combination of COP with L-asparaginase (L-COP) protocols. We conducted a retrospective study. Medical records and hematological and blood chemistry parameters of 41 dogs with multicentric lymphoma treated with L-COP (n = 26) and the COP protocols (n = 15) were obtained from the hospital information system. Most cases were classified as high-grade lymphoma based on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Oncology Research · Virus-based gene therapy research · Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment
