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Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series

Canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma (COPSCC) is a rare neoplasm and although locally invasive it carries a favourable prognosis following wide surgical excision. Radiotherapy has been reported to be effective as an adjunct treatment to surgery. However, limited information is available on...

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Autores principales: van der Steen, Francine, Zandvliet, Maurice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7891416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32975025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/vco.12646
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author van der Steen, Francine
Zandvliet, Maurice
author_facet van der Steen, Francine
Zandvliet, Maurice
author_sort van der Steen, Francine
collection PubMed
description Canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma (COPSCC) is a rare neoplasm and although locally invasive it carries a favourable prognosis following wide surgical excision. Radiotherapy has been reported to be effective as an adjunct treatment to surgery. However, limited information is available on the role of radiotherapy as single treatment. This single‐institution retrospective study describes a series of 10 dogs diagnosed with macroscopic COPSCC that were treated with definitive‐intent radiotherapy (DRT) as a monotherapy. These dogs had a median age of 4 years (range: 0.4‐9.6 years). The tumour was located in the rostral oral cavity in all cases with a median tumour size of 2.5 cm (range: 0.8‐6.8 cm). No local or distant metastases were identified. All dogs were treated with electron beam DRT (>32Gy, 10‐16 daily fractions of 3.2Gy). The median follow‐up time was 961 days (range: 333‐3.498 days) with nine dogs achieving a complete response and one dog a partial response. The dog with the partial response developed disease progression at 228 days after initiation of radiotherapy. Two dogs died from non‐tumour‐related causes. The remaining seven dogs were still alive and in complete remission at the time of last follow‐up. Median progression‐free survival time and median survival time were not reached. DRT was generally well tolerated, but all dogs experienced self‐limiting acute radiation mucositis (grade 2‐3) and/or dermatitis (grade 1). No late radiation toxicity was observed. Macroscopic COPSCC appears to be a radiosensitive tumour that can be successfully treated with DRT eliminating the need for aggressive surgery in advanced cases.
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spelling pubmed-78914162021-03-02 Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series van der Steen, Francine Zandvliet, Maurice Vet Comp Oncol Original Articles Canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma (COPSCC) is a rare neoplasm and although locally invasive it carries a favourable prognosis following wide surgical excision. Radiotherapy has been reported to be effective as an adjunct treatment to surgery. However, limited information is available on the role of radiotherapy as single treatment. This single‐institution retrospective study describes a series of 10 dogs diagnosed with macroscopic COPSCC that were treated with definitive‐intent radiotherapy (DRT) as a monotherapy. These dogs had a median age of 4 years (range: 0.4‐9.6 years). The tumour was located in the rostral oral cavity in all cases with a median tumour size of 2.5 cm (range: 0.8‐6.8 cm). No local or distant metastases were identified. All dogs were treated with electron beam DRT (>32Gy, 10‐16 daily fractions of 3.2Gy). The median follow‐up time was 961 days (range: 333‐3.498 days) with nine dogs achieving a complete response and one dog a partial response. The dog with the partial response developed disease progression at 228 days after initiation of radiotherapy. Two dogs died from non‐tumour‐related causes. The remaining seven dogs were still alive and in complete remission at the time of last follow‐up. Median progression‐free survival time and median survival time were not reached. DRT was generally well tolerated, but all dogs experienced self‐limiting acute radiation mucositis (grade 2‐3) and/or dermatitis (grade 1). No late radiation toxicity was observed. Macroscopic COPSCC appears to be a radiosensitive tumour that can be successfully treated with DRT eliminating the need for aggressive surgery in advanced cases. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2020-10-01 2021-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7891416/ /pubmed/32975025 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/vco.12646 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Veterinary and Comparative Oncology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
van der Steen, Francine
Zandvliet, Maurice
Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title_full Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title_fullStr Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title_short Treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
title_sort treatment of canine oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma using definitive‐intent radiation as a monotherapy—a case series
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7891416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32975025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/vco.12646
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