1. Efficacy of chemotherapy and palliative hypofractionated radiotherapy for cats with nasal lymphoma
- Author
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Hajime Asada, Hirotaka Tomiyasu, Aki Ohmi, Hajime Tsujimoto, Maho Nakazawa, Yuko Goto-Koshino, Michio Fujita, Koichi Ohno, Kanako Suzuki, and Aki Fujiwara-Igarashi
- Subjects
Oncology ,Hypofractionated Radiotherapy ,Nasal tumor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymphoma ,040301 veterinary sciences ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Nose Neoplasms ,cat ,Disease ,chemotherapy ,Cat Diseases ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Animals ,Progression-free survival ,radiotherapy ,030304 developmental biology ,Retrospective Studies ,0303 health sciences ,Chemotherapy ,CATS ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,nasal lymphoma ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,Note ,Prognosis ,Radiation therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Cats ,business - Abstract
Nasal lymphoma (NL) is the most common nasal tumor in cats, and radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or a combination of these treatments have been described as the treatment for this disease. However, the previous studies included various machines and protocols of radiotherapy. Therefore, we aimed to retrospectively compare the prognosis among cases treated with palliative hypofractionated radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and a combination of them with united machine and protocol of radiotherapy. When compared overall survival and progression free survival, there was no significant difference among these three groups. The data of this study suggested that similar efficacy could be achieved by palliative hypofractionated radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or a combination of them.
- Published
- 2021