There are four main categories of lymphoma:Â
Different types of lymphoma can change survival times
Lymphoma is classified by many different variables: where the lymphoma is affecting the body, what kind of cells are cancerous, what stage the cancer is in, and whether or not the patient is showing symptoms. All of those classifications, when combined together, lead to different treatment methods and expected outcomes of that treatment.Â
Within those categories of lymphoma there are also cell types:
While it is not the standard, nor most effective treatment, canine lymphoma can be treated with steroid drugs to keep the effects of lymphoma at bay. Steroids are used to prevent inflammation and cancerous cells behave similarly to immune cell flare-ups.Â
When a dog is given prednisoneâa steroid drugâas their lymphoma treatment it is more so to give the dog a bit more time with a better quality of life. Treatment on prednisone alone can bring a dog into a remission (where the cancerous cells are no longer active) but they typically only last an average of 4-6 weeks before a relapse.
The most effective treatment for lymphoma is chemotherapyâspecifically multiagent chemotherapyâbecause lymphoma affects the whole body and chemotherapy is a systemic treatment. Multiagent chemotherapyâusing multiple different drugsâis beneficial because of the nature of the immune system. The cells that become cancerous, when healthy, are designed to fight off potential threats to the body, so once those cells become cancerous any threat to the cancer is one that they will now be fighting off. When only using one medication, those cells learn that the treatment is hurtful to the cancer, and as a result, they quickly adapt to be able to fight against it. By using multiple drugs, the cells dont get enough time to adapt to each form of treatment, effectively stopping the spread and lowering the number of cancerous cells.
CHOP is the âGold Standard treatment for canine lymphoma because of its high efficacy rates. Dogs treated with a CHOP protocol (or another effective multiagent chemotherapy) can live anywhere from 10-14 months or more in remission.Â
Some canine lymphoma patients may benefit from the addition of radiation to a chemotherapy treatment. Radiation is a highly toxic form of treatment that is usually reserved for more localized forms of cancer. When using radiation therapy on lymphoma patients itâs performed in a âhalf-bodyâ method, where half of the body receives the treatment, and then the patient has at least 2 weeks to recover before receiving the treatment on the other half of the body.
If chemotherapy alone isnât working, radiation therapy can be that final âpushâ into remission. While there is not much data on how radiation therapy affects survival times, it can be expected to have a similar length of remission time as a successful chemotherapy treatment.
Does your dog have cancer? Lymphoma in the Dog. Vet explains symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment.
A clinical trial looks at whether combining immunotherapy with low doses of chemotherapy can improve outcomes and quality of life for dogs—and someday people
A 7-year-old yellow English Lab, Jake is a “big goofy guy with a giant smile,” said his owner, Danielle Sweder of Marlborough, Mass. “He’s always happy and loves to eat, play, and spread joy to others with his infectious enthusiasm.”
Jake seemed as plucky and healthy as ever at his annual exam in May, but his veterinarian decided to do a biopsy after noticing some telltale thickening around the Lab’s neck. The test revealed devastating news: Jake had B-cell lymphoma.
One of the most common cancers in dogs, lymphoma is a cancer of white blood cells called lymphocytes that normally help protect against infection. The lymphoma cells typically accumulate in the lymph glands (also called nodes) and other organs that are part of the immune system (such as the spleen), causing rapid enlargement. In most dogs, many lymph nodes are involved across the body. This was the case for Jake, who had enlarged lymph nodes across his whole body.
In general, dogs with lymphoma tend to survive a very short period of time without treatment—only around two to three months. However, lymphoma is a type of cancer that usually responds well to chemotherapy. The standard chemotherapy treatment regimen—CHOP, an acronym for 4 different drugs that are used—can extend that survival time for most dogs to 10 to 14 months.
When Sweder met with an oncologist at the Foster Hospital for Small Animals, she learned about an encouraging new treatment option. Jake qualified for a clinical trial studying an experimental therapy that helps to activate the immune system to kill lymphoma cells in dogs.