4.2 Article

Outcome and prognosis for canine appendicular osteosarcoma treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy in 123 dogs

期刊

VETERINARY AND COMPARATIVE ONCOLOGY
卷 19, 期 2, 页码 284-294

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/vco.12674

关键词

bone; lameness; limb-spare; radiotherapy; stereotactic

资金

  1. NCATS NIH HHS [L30 TR002126] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIH HHS [K01 OD022982] Funding Source: Medline

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Canine appendicular osteosarcoma can be effectively treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), improving lameness in most patients and achieving >80% tumor necrosis in 50% of cases for local disease control. While some patients may experience fractures and require amputation after treatment, dogs who undergo salvage amputation have a significantly longer median survival time compared to those who do not. Metastatic disease at the time of treatment does not significantly impact survival time.
Canine appendicular osteosarcoma is commonly treated with limb amputation; however, limb-sparing options are frequently desired or necessary for a subset of patients. We evaluated 123 patients and 130 sites treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). Eighty-two out of 98 dogs (84%) had maximum lameness improvement at a median of 3 weeks for a median of 6 months duration. Histopathologic evaluation of available samples from amputation or necropsy revealed >80% tumor necrosis in 50% of limbs consistent with local disease control. Of evaluable patients, 41% fractured and 21% pursued an amputation after treatment. Fine needle aspirate (n = 52) and needle core biopsy (n = 28) did not result in increased fracture risk compared to those without tumor sampling (n = 50). Median survival time (MST) was 233 days and time to first event was 143 days. Gross tumor volume and planned target volume were significantly inversely associated with survival and tumor location was significantly associated with survival. Dogs with salvage amputation had a significantly longer MST compared to those without (346 vs 202 days; P = .04). The presence of metastatic disease at the time of treatment in 15 dogs did not significantly impact survival time (200 vs 237 days without metastasis; P = .58). Skin side effects correlated significantly with dose with 33% of patients with acute grade 3 effects developing consequential late grade 3 effects. While SBRT improves lameness in most patients, further investigation is needed to identify candidates with minimal early fracture risk prior to initiating therapy.

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