Schlueter Andrew, Hanot Camille, Sellon Rance, Fidel Janean
Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA.
Medi-Vet SA, Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Feline Med Surg. 2025 Apr;27(4):1098612X251314343. doi: 10.1177/1098612X251314343. Epub 2025 Apr 4.
ObjectivesOral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common oral tumor in cats but treatment options that provide long-term tumor control are limited. Radiation therapy is a reported treatment option, but local tumor control is still difficult to obtain and additional treatment options are needed. Toceranib phosphate recently emerged as having biologic activity against feline oral SCC. This study is a preliminary evaluation of radiation therapy and toceranib phosphate in cats with oral SCC.MethodsThis non-blinded, retrospective, single-institutional study included all patients between 2011 and 2023 that underwent the same treatment with accelerated radiation therapy and concurrent carboplatin as previously described, with the exception of one additional fraction of radiation. Once the early side effects abated, toceranib phosphate was offered as follow-up maintenance therapy. The median survival time (MST) and progression-free interval (PFI) were assessed for the cats that received toceranib after radiation therapy and carboplatin, and were compared with the cats that received the same radiation and carboplatin protocol within the same time period but did not receive follow-up toceranib.ResultsOverall, 47 cats met the criteria for evaluation; of them, 15 received follow-up toceranib. The MST of all cats was 164 days; there was no significant difference in MST or PFI between the cats that did and did not receive adjuvant toceranib (MST 208 days vs 162 days, respectively; = 0.35). When comparing cats with lingual tumors, the PFI was significantly longer in the cats that received toceranib than those that did not (142 days vs 104 days, respectively; = 0.045); however, there was no difference in MST (197 days vs 147 days; = 0.15).Conclusions and relevanceThis study suggests that most cats with oral SCC do not benefit from toceranib after radiation therapy. There may be clinical benefit to administering adjuvant toceranib after radiation in cats with lingual SCCs, but the mechanism remains unclear and additional studies are warranted.
目的
口腔鳞状细胞癌(SCC)是猫最常见的口腔肿瘤,但能提供长期肿瘤控制的治疗选择有限。放射治疗是一种已报道的治疗选择,但仍难以实现局部肿瘤控制,因此需要其他治疗选择。磷酸托西拉尼最近被发现对猫口腔SCC具有生物活性。本研究是对口腔SCC猫进行放射治疗和磷酸托西拉尼的初步评估。
方法
这项非盲、回顾性、单机构研究纳入了2011年至2023年间所有接受与先前描述相同的加速放射治疗和同步卡铂治疗的患者,但额外增加了一次放射剂量。一旦早期副作用减轻,提供磷酸托西拉尼作为后续维持治疗。对接受放射治疗和卡铂后接受磷酸托西拉尼的猫评估中位生存时间(MST)和无进展生存期(PFI),并与在同一时期接受相同放射和卡铂方案但未接受后续磷酸托西拉尼的猫进行比较。
结果
总体而言,47只猫符合评估标准;其中15只接受了后续磷酸托西拉尼治疗。所有猫的MST为164天;接受和未接受辅助磷酸托西拉尼的猫之间的MST或PFI无显著差异(MST分别为208天和162天;P = 0.35)。比较有舌部肿瘤的猫时,接受磷酸托西拉尼的猫的PFI显著长于未接受的猫(分别为142天和104天;P = 0.045);然而,MST无差异(197天和147天;P = 0.15)。
结论与相关性
本研究表明,大多数口腔SCC猫在放射治疗后未从磷酸托西拉尼中获益。对于有舌部SCC的猫,放射治疗后给予辅助磷酸托西拉尼可能有临床益处,但其机制仍不清楚,需要进一步研究。