Pegylated-l-asparaginase therapy for feline large cell lymphoma: 82 cases (2017-2020)

Céline A Bik*, Bart R Ruijter, Lindsay Van den Bossche, Erik Teske, Stijn Jm Niessen, Yaiza Forcada

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The present study aimed to investigate pegylated-l-asparaginase monotherapy for feline large cell lymphoma as a potential alternative to palliative corticosteroids treatment in animals whose owners declined cytotoxic chemotherapy.

METHODS: A retrospective, descriptive case series of cats treated initially with pegylated-l-asparaginase as a sole therapy for feline large cell lymphoma is reported. The treatment protocol consisted of 12 intramuscular injections of pegylated-l-asparaginase with increasing intervals. If cats were unresponsive to pegylated-l-asparaginase monotherapy, a second-line treatment was initiated. Signalment, origin of lymphoma, staging, treatment, possible adverse events and follow-up data were extracted from the medical records. Responses and survival data were analysed.

RESULTS: Eighty-two cats with lymphoma of five different anatomic types were included: alimentary, abdominal extra-alimentary, peripheral nodal, nasal/nasopharyngeal and other (mediastinal, renal [solitary] and miscellaneous combined in one group for analytical purposes). The response rate was 74.1% (95% confidence interval = 63.4-83.5) with 38.3% (95% confidence interval = 27.8-48.8) in complete remission. The median disease-free period and calculated overall survival time were 70 days (12-1702+) and 79 days (1-1715+), respectively. The response rate was significantly correlated with the origin of the lymphoma and the combined group had a significantly lower response rate ( P  = 0.035). Twenty-four cats were also treated with corticosteroids. There was no significant difference in outcomes between the group treated with or without corticosteroids. Adverse events were present in a small number of cats (14/82). The majority of these adverse events were mild to moderate in 5/14 cats; however, the adverse events were severe enough to cause discontinuation of therapy.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Based on the response rate and median disease-free period, treatment with pegylated-l-asparaginase is inferior when compared with historical chemotherapy protocols. However, some cats demonstrated an exceptional long disease-free period. Therefore, pegylated-l-asparaginase could be offered as an alternative to corticosteroid therapy alone. Further studies are needed to evaluate the additional benefit over palliative corticosteroid monotherapy.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1098612X231193536
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Feline Medicine and Surgery
Volume25
Issue number9
Early online date15 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.

Keywords

  • Lymphoma
  • lymphosarcoma
  • peg-asparaginase
  • pegylated asparaginase
  • Oncaspar
  • prednisolone

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