2006
DOI: 10.5326/0420110
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Retrospective Evaluation of Adjunctive Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Feline Mammary Gland Adenocarcinoma: 67 Cases

Abstract: Medical records for 67 cats with histologically confirmed mammary gland adenocarcinomas treated with adjunctive doxorubicin from June 1994 through December 2002 were reviewed. Data were examined to evaluate factors influencing disease-free interval (DFI) and survival time. The Kaplan-Meier median survival time of cats that received surgery and doxorubicin was 448 days. The Kaplan-Meier median DFI was 255 days. Significant univariate prognostic factors for DFI included histological subtype, completion of initia… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(79 citation statements)
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“…Bilateral mastectomy can be performed as a single-session procedure or in a staged fashion; for the latter, the 2 procedures are typically performed several weeks apart. In 1 study, 4 37 cats undergoing staged bilateral mastectomy had a longer disease-free interval than those undergoing unilateral mastectomy (917 days vs 348 days); however, this result was only statistically significant in the univariable model. Limited information exists in the published literature on cats treated with bilateral mastectomy for management of mammary adenocarcinoma, and the complication rate associated with this procedure is largely unknown.…”
Section: Small Animals and Exoticmentioning
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Bilateral mastectomy can be performed as a single-session procedure or in a staged fashion; for the latter, the 2 procedures are typically performed several weeks apart. In 1 study, 4 37 cats undergoing staged bilateral mastectomy had a longer disease-free interval than those undergoing unilateral mastectomy (917 days vs 348 days); however, this result was only statistically significant in the univariable model. Limited information exists in the published literature on cats treated with bilateral mastectomy for management of mammary adenocarcinoma, and the complication rate associated with this procedure is largely unknown.…”
Section: Small Animals and Exoticmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…prognostic factors for mammary adenocarcinoma in cats, and factors found to be significant in individual studies include tumor size, 11,12 TNM stage, 8 histologic subtype, 10,13 histologic grade, 8,14 and lymphatic invasion 3,8 as well as a variety of proliferative markers including mitotic index, 8,15 Ki67 positivity, 8 and mean AgNOR count per neoplastic cell. 16 Administration of adjuvant chemotherapy has been suggested to have a beneficial prognostic effect in some studies 4 ; however, in 1 study 6 that included a control population that did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy, no obvious beneficial effect of chemotherapy was seen.…”
Section: Small Animals and Exoticmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additional shortcomings and possible sources of error encountered when using tumor size (or volume) as a prognostic factor are described by Matos et al 18 Recent reports support findings here, indicating that while larger tumors (>3 cm diameter) are associated with reduced survival times, tumor size alone appears to have little or no independent prognostic value when smaller than 3 cm in diameter. 25,36 The modified WHO clinical stage provides a useful prognostic indicator in cats with advanced clinical disease. 15 Stage 3 cats had significantly reduced OS compared with stage 1 cats in this study; a statistical association between WHO stage and OS has also been noted elsewhere.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the high rate of mammary malignancy in cats, cytologic findings of a benign-appearing population of epithelial cells, particularly in an older cat with no history of progesterone administration, should be treated with some caution. However, the combination of surgery and adjunctive doxorubicin chemotherapy resulted in improved long-term survival in cats with mammary gland adenocarcinoma, but controls were not studied (Novosad, 2003;Novosad et al, 2006). Treatment considerations will follow clinical and cytologic and/or histologic identification of a mammary neoplasm in a dog or a cat.…”
Section: Neoplasiamentioning
confidence: 99%