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Hypofractionated radiation therapy for the treatment of microscopic canine soft tissue sarcoma
Author(s) -
Kung M. B. J.,
Poirier V. J.,
Dennis M. M.,
Vail D. M.,
Straw R. C.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
veterinary and comparative oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1476-5829
pISSN - 1476-5810
DOI - 10.1111/vco.12121
Subject(s) - soft tissue , radiation therapy , soft tissue sarcoma , sarcoma , medicine , radiology , pathology
Soft tissue sarcomas ( STSs ) are locally invasive and surgery with or without radiation therapy is the current standard of care in dogs. Typical protocols for treating incompletely excised STSs involve curative intent radiation with total dose in excess of 50 Gy . Forty‐eight dogs with histologically confirmed incomplete or closely excised STSs were treated with a hypofractionated protocol that is typically reserved for palliative radiation therapy ( RT ) (6–8 Gy/weekly fractions to a total dose of 24–32 Gy). Ten dogs (21%) developed local recurrence, 11 dogs (23%) developed metastasis, and 3 dogs developed both (included in each group). The median progression free survival was 698 days. The local failure‐free probability at 1 and 3 years was 81 and 73%. The 1 and 3 years tumour‐specific overall survival was 81 and 61%. Long‐term local tumour control was achieved in the majority of dogs. This protocol is reasonable to prescribe in older patients or when financial limitations exist.