1. An aggressive <scp> CD4 − CD8 </scp> − T‐cell neoplasm in young English bulldogs
- Author
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Anne C. Avery, Emily D. Rout, Kelly L. Hughes, Paul R. Avery, Susan E. Lana, Julia D. Labadie, Janna A Yoshimoto, and Kari A. Frankhouse
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,General Veterinary ,Clinical pathology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,Leukemia ,Immunophenotyping ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,CD5 ,Hematopathology ,business ,CD8 - Abstract
BACKGROUND T-cell leukemia/lymphoma accounts for roughly 30% of all types of lymphoproliferative neoplasia in dogs. Two forms of T-cell lymphoma (T-zone and peripheral T-cell lymphoma) exhibit breed-specific predilections. During the course of routine immunophenotyping, we observed a breed-specific presentation of a unique form of T-cell leukemia in young English bulldogs. OBJECTIVE To describe the clinical presentation and outcome of a novel T-cell leukemia in English bulldogs and determine the frequency of this neoplasm in other breeds. METHODS The Clinical Hematopathology database, containing immunophenotyping data from peripheral blood of nearly 11,900 dogs, was queried for the phenotype observed in young English bulldogs: CD45+ CD4- CD8- CD5+ CD3+ class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC)ᶫ° T-cell leukemia. Clinical presentation, treatment, and survival data were collected for a subset of cases. RESULTS Fifty-five English bulldog cases and 64 cases of other breeds were identified. No other breed was represented by >5 cases. Complete medical records were obtained for 50 bulldogs. Median age at diagnosis was 3 years and 76% of cases were male. Median lymphocyte count was 44,286 lymphocytes/ul (range, 1,800-317,684/ul) and lymphocytes were described as small to intermediate-sized. Many dogs were thrombocytopenic and had liver and spleen involvement, but not lymphadenopathy. Bulldogs that received multi-agent chemotherapy had longer median survival times (83 days) compared to dogs that received no treatment (6 days) or less aggressive therapy (15 days) (p=0.001). Non-bulldogs had similar outcomes. CONCLUSION CD4- CD8- class II MHCᶫ° T-cell leukemia has an aggressive clinical course and predilection for young English bulldogs. Breed-specific presentation suggests an underlying genetic cause. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021