Veterinary Medicine and Science (Feb 2019)

Intratumoral temozolomide in spontaneous canine gliomas: feasibility of a novel therapy using implanted microcylinders

  • Jill Hicks,
  • Simon Platt,
  • Georgina Stewart,
  • Christine Senneca,
  • Shannon Holmes,
  • Marc Kent,
  • Elizabeth Howerth,
  • Jared Kaplan,
  • Edward Kaplan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 5 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Entotherapy an image‐guided drug‐eluting microcylinder platform, has the potential to bypass the limitations of systemic chemotherapy use in the treatment of canine brain tumours. Gliomas, which are common in dogs and also represent the majority of fatal brain tumours in humans, can be amenable to chemotherapy with temozolomide. Biopolymer microcylinders conjugated with temozolomide and gadolinium were implanted into partially resected tumours of four client‐owned dogs with gliomas. All four dogs presented with generalized seizures and had mild to no neurologic deficits at the time of craniotomy. All dogs underwent craniotomy for implantation of the microcylinders into partially resected gliomas (glioblastoma multiforme {n = 1} or oligodendroglioma {n = 3}). All dogs recovered well from the craniotomy and implantation procedure. This novel procedure appears to be feasible and tolerated in tumour‐bearing dogs. A future controlled clinical study can now aim to evaluate the microcylinder implantation for long‐term efficacy.

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