Use of Cyclophosphamide, Vincristine, Prednisolone and Vinblastine for the Treatment of Large Cell Lymphoma in Cats.

in Journal of veterinary internal medicine by Lee Pui Yung Anna, Rodrigo Horta, Cheryl Nathalie Sze, Antonio Giuliano

TLDR

  • The study evaluated the modified COVP protocol for treating large-cell lymphoma in cats and found it to be effective and tolerable, with acceptable survival and response rates compared to traditional chemotherapy protocols.

Abstract

The standard chemotherapy treatment for large-cell lymphoma in cats is CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone) or COP (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisolone) chemotherapy protocols. Substituting vinblastine for vincristine might have similar efficacy, with lower severity of gastrointestinal adverse events. To evaluate whether the addition of vinblastine to a low-dose vincristine COP protocol could reduce the frequency and severity of adverse gastrointestinal effects while maintaining or increasing efficacy. Medical records of 41 cats with large-cell lymphoma treated with the modified COVP protocol at one veterinary referral institution. Retrospective case series study. All relevant clinical data were retrospectively collected. Median progression-free survival, disease-free interval, and survival time were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier Method. Differences between groups were analyzed using the log-rank test, and adverse events were graded using VCOG-CTCAE v2. Progression-free survival was 264 days (range, 6-1486 days), the disease-free interval was 812 days (range, 39-1486 days) and the median survival time for all cats was 412 days (range, 7-1772 days). Complete response was achieved in 59% of the cases, and partial response was observed in 17%. Cats that achieved CR lived significantly longer, 838 days (range, 81-1772 days) versus 143 days (range, 10-798 days; p = 0.0018). The COVP protocol was generally well tolerated, and the most common adverse effects were mild signs of gastrointestinal disease and hematological abnormalities that did not require a pause in treatment. Grade-1 vomiting was the most common (24%), followed by grade-2 (22%) and grade-1 reduced appetite (20%). Cats with lymphoma treated with COVP seem to achieve acceptable survival and response rates compared to traditional chemotherapy protocols.

Overview

  • The study evaluates the modified COVP protocol, which replaces vincristine with vinblastine in a low-dose COP protocol, to reduce gastrointestinal adverse events in cats with large-cell lymphoma.
  • The study aims to assess the efficacy and tolerability of the modified COVP protocol and compare it to traditional chemotherapy protocols.
  • Medical records of 41 cats with large-cell lymphoma were retrospectively reviewed to gather relevant clinical data.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The study found that the modified COVP protocol had a median progression-free survival of 264 days, disease-free interval of 812 days, and median survival time of 412 days.
  • The study showed that cats that achieved complete response lived significantly longer, with a median survival time of 838 days, compared to those who did not achieve complete response.
  • The most common adverse effects observed were mild signs of gastrointestinal disease and hematological abnormalities, which did not require a pause in treatment.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study suggests that the modified COVP protocol may be an acceptable alternative to traditional chemotherapy protocols for cats with large-cell lymphoma.
  • Future studies should investigate the optimal dosing and duration of the modified COVP protocol to achieve improved efficacy and tolerability.
  • Additionally, further research is needed to compare the modified COVP protocol to other chemotherapy protocols and to identify potential predictors of response and survival.