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Chemotherapy Protocols
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New York, NY
Member Since:
24 March 2020
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26 April 2020 - 5:51 pm
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Hi.  Griffin's oncologist has recommended 11 total rounds of chemo - 6 Carboplatin alternating with 5 Doxorubicin/Adriamycin.  She said that there is no published data, only anecdotal information, to support that doing so improves survival time.  She also said that while there is a limit to how much Doxo which can be administered to a dog for his lifetime, some families choose to continue Carbo on a monthly basis indefinitely.  Additionally, I've seen information here/internet about the wait time after Carbo being 3 weeks.  Griffin will wait 4 weeks after Carbo and 3 weeks after Doxo before receiving his next round of chemo.  I would appreciate input/opinions/info from anyone with experience about continuing chemo treatments (Carbo, Doxo, or both) after 6 rounds and/or experience with the Carbo/Doxo combination, as well as information about the wait times between rounds of chemo.  Thank you!  ~ Stacy (Griffin's Journey)

Griffin lived an amazing life for 11 years! Diagnosed with osteosarcoma on March 17, 2020, Griffin's right forelimb was amputated on April 2, 2020. Ten days later he was running and playing fetch! Lung metastasis discovered in July 2020 did not slow down Griffin and he lived joyfully for the next 7 months, passing peacefully at home on February 11, 2021. https://griffin.tripawds.com


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27 April 2020 - 9:19 am
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I have not seen anything published that supports giving more than 6 rounds of carboplatin 3 weeks apart and older protocols did rotate carboplatin with Adriamycin but with more side effects.  I am not an oncologist so I can only comment on what the specialists here in the Seattle area recommend and that is 5 to 6 rounds of carboplatin and then the osteosarcoma vaccine which fortunately is available in our area on a trial basis.  Does your dog have osteosarcoma or a different tumor? I do know that hemangiosarcoma is more sensitive to Adriamycin.

Pam

New York, NY
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27 April 2020 - 10:22 am
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Hi Pam! Thanks for the quick reply.  Griffin was diagnosed with right distal radius osteosarcoma on March 17th and underwent amputation surgery on April 2nd.  He had the first round of Carboplatin on April 17th and tolerated it very well.  His CBC from April 24th showed no concerns.  Our oncologist is Dr. Maria Camps at the Animal Medical Center in NYC.  Thanks! ~ Stacy

Griffin lived an amazing life for 11 years! Diagnosed with osteosarcoma on March 17, 2020, Griffin's right forelimb was amputated on April 2, 2020. Ten days later he was running and playing fetch! Lung metastasis discovered in July 2020 did not slow down Griffin and he lived joyfully for the next 7 months, passing peacefully at home on February 11, 2021. https://griffin.tripawds.com

New York, NY
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29 April 2020 - 2:31 pm
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After a series of emails back and forth with the oncologists (Dr. Maria Camps and Dr. Andrea Smith, both at the Animal Medical Center), I have a lot more information.  I'm including it below in the question and answer format that matches our emails.  In my regular forum post and blog about Griffin's Journey, I explain the course of treatment I have chosen to follow for Griffin.

1. What is your success rate with the 11 rounds of chemo versus 6 rounds?  If no hard data is available, what is your anecdotal evidence?  Anecdotally, we have had more patients with survival times over a year and closer to 2 years, who received more chemotherapy, compared to the reported 9-12 months seen with carboplatin alone or doxorubicin alone. But again, this is just one small population and studies looking at combination protocols have not shown a significant difference between single agent and combination protocols. ​Again, this is just our experience and other oncologists may have had other experiences. 

2. What is your success rate with alternating agents versus single agent Carboplatin?  Are there scenarios when you recommend single-agent treatments instead of alternating? We feel completely comfortable recommending single agent carboplatin or single agent doxorubicin, especially in cases where using a combination protocol is not feasibly possible for the family; single agent therapy is the standard of care. We like to offer the combination protocol as an option for those who don't feel comfortable stopping treatment after just 5 or 6 treatments, and again in our experience, those patients sometimes do just a little bit better. ​

3. How often have you stopped treatments due to side effects from Carboplatin?  from Doxorubicin? Discontinuation of treatment due to side effects is very rare, with either treatment (less than 5%). Additionally, side effects are completely patient dependent and some dogs often tolerate one drug better than another. 70% of our patients won't have any side effects from either chemo, 30% will need supportive care at home, while 10% may need in-hospital aggressive supportive care.  In our experience, carboplatin tends to cause more bone marrow suppression while doxorubibin tends to cause more GI side effects. 

4. What is the rationale for waiting 4 weeks for the next round after Carboplatin when the standard seems to be 3 weeks? The dosing for carboplatin is every 3-4 weeks, and again is somewhat oncologist dependent. We generally choose to administer the highest recommended dose given every 4 weeks in our patients as it tends to be tolerated better and results in less treatment delays (sometimes the bone marrow doesn't have enough time to recover in 3 weeks). 

5. If I could do only 5-6 rounds of chemo, would you still recommend alternating drugs or would you recommend using Carboplatin only? ​We would recommend doing single agent carboplatin or doxorubicin in that case, since that the standard of care.  We would advise to pursue either 4-6 carbo doses (gold standard therapy with preference to 6 doses).  If you choose to alternate for more than 6 doses, we'd recommend giving 4-6 carbo and 4-5 doxo treatments.

6. If I wanted to pursue the Yale vaccine option and could afford only 6 rounds of chemo, would you suggest completing all chemo first and then administering the vaccine or pausing chemo after 4 rounds, administering the vaccine, and then completing the last 2 rounds of chemo?  ​We would recommend finishing the protocol and not interrupting therapy, as we know that chemotherapy is beneficial for this disease. Since the impact of the vaccine is unknown, we would rather he complete the standard of care therapy without interruption, before pursuing an experimental treatment.

7. What about continuing with additional rounds of chemo after completing 6 rounds and then the vaccine? Since chemotherapy works on the microscopic disease setting and we are under the assumption that the cancer will progress when we stop the chemo (that's why we recommend continuing it), we wouldn't advise stopping it for a few months and then re-starting it for fear that it won't be as effective.  However, we could revisit that option in January if Griffin continues to maintain a full remission.

8. Besides the chemotherapy, what additional actions are recommended? We recommend repeating chest x-rays every 3-4 months and repeating abdominal ultrasound every 6-12 months. 

Griffin lived an amazing life for 11 years! Diagnosed with osteosarcoma on March 17, 2020, Griffin's right forelimb was amputated on April 2, 2020. Ten days later he was running and playing fetch! Lung metastasis discovered in July 2020 did not slow down Griffin and he lived joyfully for the next 7 months, passing peacefully at home on February 11, 2021. https://griffin.tripawds.com

On The Road


Member Since:
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29 April 2020 - 6:17 pm
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Stacy thank you for sharing, these are fantastic questions you are asking and equally awesome information your oncologists have shared. I'm going to contact Dr. Camps to see if we can interview her for Tripawd Talk Radio. Thanks for the information.

Tripawds Founders Jim and Rene
tripawds.com | tripawds.org | bemoredog.net | triday.pet

Member Since:
27 August 2020
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14 September 2020 - 4:13 pm
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Ditto, thank you so much Stacy for doing the leg work (ha!?) and sharing. Louie starts chemo tomorrow and I feel better about it now thanks to you. (Plus he's been doing some of Griffin's PT exercises while he waits for his own PT eval scheduled later this month).

Virginia







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22 February 2013
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14 September 2020 - 4:31 pm
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Just to add one more thing,  IF. I recall( big IF), it seems as though Teresa posted on one of Great Dane Eurydice's thread about a dog (in Europe) who was on a continuation of Carboplatin  for a year (at the time).  I know I saw  that  "somewhere" on the site.  I remember  being  shocked...or maybe surprised is a better word.  I've only seen that therapy mentioned  one time since being on here.  Anyway Stacy, I'll ask Teresa to chime in on uour other thread iF she has any input from Europe👍

Happy Hannah had a glorious additional bonus time of over one yr & two months after amp for osteo! She made me laugh everyday! Joined April's Angels after send off meal of steak, ice cream, M&Ms & deer poop!

On The Road


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24 September 2009
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14 September 2020 - 9:12 pm
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Louie'sStaff said
Ditto, thank you so much Stacy for doing the leg work (ha!?) and sharing. Louie starts chemo tomorrow and I feel better about it now thanks to you. (Plus he's been doing some of Griffin's PT exercises while he waits for his own PT eval scheduled later this month).

  

Good luck tomorrow Louie! Please keep us posted in a new topic, we'll be thinking of you.smiley10

Tripawds Founders Jim and Rene
tripawds.com | tripawds.org | bemoredog.net | triday.pet

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