Abstract

Doxycycline has antiproliferative effects in human lymphoma cells and in murine xenografts. We hypothesized that doxycycline would decrease canine lymphoma cell viability and prospectively evaluated its clinical tolerability in client-owned dogs with spontaneous, nodal, multicentric, substage a, B-cell lymphoma, not previously treated with chemotherapy. Treatment duration ranged from 1 to 8 weeks (median and mean, 3 weeks). Dogs were treated with either 10 (n = 6) or 7.5 (n = 7) mg/kg by mouth twice daily. One dog had a stable disease for 6 weeks. No complete or partial tumor responses were observed. Five dogs developed grade 3 and/or 4 metabolic abnormalities suggestive of hepatopathy with elevations in bilirubin, ALT, ALP, and/or AST. To evaluate the absorption of oral doxycycline in our study population, serum concentrations in 10 treated dogs were determined using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Serum levels were variable and ranged from 3.6 to 16.6 µg/ml (median, 7.6 µg/ml; mean, 8.8 µg/ml). To evaluate the effect of doxycycline on canine lymphoma cell viability in vitro, trypan blue exclusion assay was performed on canine B-cell lymphoma cell lines (17-71 and CLBL) and primary B-cell lymphoma cells from the nodal tissue of four dogs. A doxycycline concentration of 6 µg/ml decreased canine lymphoma cell viability by 80%, compared to matched, untreated, control cells (mixed model analysis, p < 0.0001; Wilcoxon signed rank test, p = 0.0313). Although the short-term administration of oral doxycycline is not associated with the remission of canine lymphoma, combination therapy may be worthwhile if future research determines that doxycycline can alter cell survival pathways in canine lymphoma cells. Due to the potential for metabolic abnormalities, close monitoring is recommended with the use of this drug in tumor-bearing dogs. Additional research is needed to assess the tolerability of chronic doxycycline therapy.

Highlights

  • Lymphoma is a malignant cancer of the lymphocytes

  • We investigated the clinical response of multicentric, canine B-cell lymphoma to oral doxycycline therapy

  • We found that a doxycycline concentration of 6 μg/ml was associated with a decreased viability of canine lymphoma cells in vitro (Figures 2A–C)

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Summary

Introduction

Lymphoma is a malignant cancer of the lymphocytes While it can arise in almost any organ, it occurs most often in the lymphoid tissues such as lymph nodes, spleen, and liver [1]. It is a common neoplasm in both dogs and people [2, 3]. Aggressive, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most frequently diagnosed subtype in both species [3, 4]. Treatment recommendations for canine lymphoma are generally based on whether the disease is indolent or aggressive and whether specific non-lymphoid organs are involved. A variety of novel therapies are in development but either lack randomized controlled trial comparisons to CHOP or are not yet commercially available [17,18,19,20,21,22]

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