Dose and Duration of Upfront Steroid Administration Have no Prognostic Impact in Dogs With Multicentric Diffuse Large B‐Cell Lymphoma
Ilaria Maga, Silvia Sabattini, Valeria Martini, Fulvio Riondato, Luca Aresu, Laura Marconato

TL;DR
Steroids given before chemotherapy in dogs with lymphoma don't improve outcomes and may harm diagnosis and treatment results.
Contribution
This study shows that steroid dose and duration before chemotherapy don't affect survival in dogs with lymphoma.
Findings
Steroid use before chemotherapy reduced flow cytometry diagnostic yield in dogs with DLBCL.
Time to progression and survival were significantly worse in dogs pre-treated with steroids.
Immunotherapy improved lymphoma-specific survival regardless of steroid use.
Abstract
Steroids provide rapid clinical improvement in dogs with multicentric diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (DLBCL). However, their use before chemotherapy can induce chemoresistance and compromise diagnostic yield due to increased apoptotic cells. This retrospective study assessed the impact of steroid dose and duration on flow cytometry (FC) diagnostic yield and clinical outcomes in dogs with DLBCL subsequently treated with chemotherapy. Of 273 dogs diagnosed with DLBCL between January 2014 and March 2024, 67 (24.5%) received steroids before treatment (median dose: 1 mg/kg, range: 0.5–3 mg/kg; median duration 8 days, range: 1–1080 days). In 94.0% of cases, steroids were administered for lymphoma management. All dogs received CHOP‐based chemotherapy, and 38 (56.7%) also received immunotherapy. Median time to progression (TTP) and lymphoma‐specific survival (LSS) were 143 days (95% CI: 111–175)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Oncology Research · Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research · Virus-based gene therapy research
