Helping More Dogs with Lymphoma
Lymphoma is one of the most common cancers in dogs with few treatment options available. Traditional injectable chemotherapeutic drugs have been used to extend quality of life, achieve clinical remissions, and slow cancer progression, but are not feasible options for many families. Additional safe, low cost therapies are needed for canine patients. Multi-agent chemotherapy plus prednisone (an oral steroid pill) is the standard treatment. However, this is not a viable option for many families with affected dogs. Cyclophosphamide is also given by mouth, inexpensive, and part of the standard of care chemotherapy protocol for dogs with lymphoma, but it's effectiveness as a single agent has not been well-studied or reported. We want to learn about what happens when prednisone, an antibiotic, and cyclophosphamide are used together. Our goal is to develop a well-tolerated, effective, oral chemotherapy protocol as an alternative for families that want to avoid injectable chemotherapy.
About Lymphoma
Background
Causes
Diagnosis
Treatment
No preventative measures are currently available but it is recommended that breeds at a higher risk of developing lymphoma being screened by their veterinarian on a regular basis in an attempt to identify the disease at the earliest stage possible.
The most effective therapy for most types of canine lymphoma is chemotherapy. In some cases, surgery or radiation therapy may also be recommended. There are numerous chemotherapy treatment protocols for dogs with multicentric lymphoma. As discussed below, most dogs with lymphoma experience remission of their cancer following treatment, and side effects are usually not severe. Currently, the protocols that achieve the highest rates of remission and longest overall survival times involve combinations of drugs given over several weeks to months. The median length of survival of dogs with multicentric lymphoma treated with UW-25 chemotherapy is between 9-13 months. (The term “median” implies that 50% of dogs will survive beyond this time point and 50% of treated dogs will die before this time point.) Various other factors, such the type of lymphoma your dog has or its stage of disease, may affect your dog’s overall prognosis.
Eligibility
Compensation
Owner Responsibilities
Location
1. Cornell University Hospital for Animals (CUHA)
930 N Campus, Ithaca, NY 14853
(607) 253-3060
Study Team
Carol Frederick
Clinical Trials Coordinator
Carol graduated from SUNY Delhi in 1994 and became an LVT. She spent 2 years in private practice, then moved to the emergency and critical care department at Cornell University Hospital for Animals. She obtained her technician specialty in ECC in 2007. After 21 years in ECC she moved to clinical trials, and now is the lead trials coordinator at Cornell.