Oncology: Canine Lymphoma Flashcards
What do lymphomas arise from?
Lymphoreticular
T or B cells
normally from lymphoid tissue
What aetiology increases lymphomas?
Multifactoral and largely unkoen
- Genetic and molecular factors
- Infectious disease
- Toxins
- Immunologic factors
What are the different anatomical classifications of lymphomas?
Most common to least common
* Multicentric
* Craniomediastinal
* Gastro-intestinal
* Cutaneous
* Extra-nodal forms
How do multicentric lymphomas present?
Generalised peripheral lymphadenopathy
* Moderate to marked lymph node enlargment
* Regional oedema- if lymph drainage impaired
* Non-specific signs
What do these images show?
GI (alimentary) lymphoma
Vomiting, diarrhoea, weight loss, pan-hypoproteinaemia
Abdominal mass or diffuse
Tends to be aggressive in dogs
What are the different froms of cutaneous lymphoma?
Epitheliotropic
* T cell
* Solitary or generalized
Non-epitheliotropic
* B cells
* Lesions else where likely
Where can extranodal lymphoma form?
Hepatosplenic
* Aggressive- T cell
CNS
Renal
Urinary bladder
Heart
What is paraneoplastic syndrome?
Syndrome that is a consequence of the tumour
* Hypercalcaemia
* Immune mediated diseases (IMHA)
* Monoclonal gammopathies
* Neuropathies
* Cachexia- muscle loss
What is the differential diagnosis of multicentric lymphoma?
Infectious disease
How is lymphoma diagnosed?
Cytological or histopathological
Ancillary tests: PARR, flow cytometry, immunochemistry
What is stage I-V lymphoma
- I- involvement limited to a single lymph node
- II-Involvment of lymph nodes in a regional area ± tonsils
- III- Generalised lymph node involvement
- IV- Hepatic and/or splenic involvment
- V- manifestations in the blood and involvement of bone marrow
How is lymphoma staged?
- Haematology
- Biochemistry- hypercalcaemia
- Aspirate or biopsy of other lymph nodes
- Thoracic radiographs, abdominal US
- Bone marrow biopsy
How can lymphoma be treated?
- No treatment- asymptomatic MST 4-5 weeks
Prednisolone alone
* Objective response rate 30% for 1-2 months
Multidrug chemotherapy
Survival depends on protocol and individual response
What are the different protocols for multidrug chemotherapy for lymphoma?
High dose COP
* preferred to low dose
* well tolerated
* haematology prior to each treatment
* Urine sample before cyclophosphamide
* response rate 60-80&
* MST 6-9 months
Discontinuous CHOP/CEOP
* Response rate 90-95%
* MST 10-12 months
* No advantage to continuous treatment
What are the potential side effects of chemotherapy?
- GI toxicity
- Myelosupression- neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anaemia
Drug specific toxicities
* Sterile haemorrhagic cystitis: cyclophosphamide
* Cardiotoxicty: Doxorubicin/Epirubicin
* Lomustine: Hepatotoxicity- monitoring of ALT and liver protectors