National Canine Lymphoma Awareness Day

November 7 has been designated as National Canine Lymphoma Awareness Day. It was established by Terry Simons, agility trainer and competitor, after his dog Reveille suffered from this terrible disease. It began in 2015 with the goal of educating and helping other pet owners understand the disease.

Lymphoma is the most common malignant cancer affecting dogs. One in fifteen dogs will be affected in their lifetimes. Breeds such as: Airedale, Basset Hound, Boxer, Bull Dog, Bull Mastiff, Saint Bernard, and Scottish Terrier- are at higher risk for developing lymphoma. However, there is no breed of dog not at risk for lymphoma. While lymphoma is often associated with enlarged lymph nodes, cancer may affect any organ in the body. The classical picture of lymphoma is an enlargement of many lymph nodes. However, sometimes there will be a single lymph node enlarged. In other cases, there may no lymph node enlargement externally, but cancer can be found in other organs such as the digestive tract, liver, or heart. Lymphoma may show up anywhere in the body.

The symptoms of lymphoma vary and are unpredictable. Dogs with classical enlarged external lymph nodes may show few signs at the beginning other than the enlarged nodes. Others may have enlarged swellings, weight loss, appetite loss, vomiting, diarrhea, difficulty breathing, nonhealing sores, or decreased activity. This variety of signs makes various tests necessary for an accurate diagnosis.

Individuals with external nodal enlargement may be diagnosed through acquiring a tissue sample and microscopic evaluation of such. Other forms may be more difficult to diagnose. They mimic other diseases that require extensive diagnostics, even exploratory surgery.

Lymphoma is a rapidly progressive disease and when left untreated has a survival time of one to two months. There are a number of chemotherapy protocols that have shown a median survival time of 15 months. That is one-half of the dogs are still alive at 15 months. There is a small group of dogs that have gone into remission for years. The word Chemotherapy often carries a negative response from dog owners because of their knowledge of human medicine. Dogs, however, tolerate chemotherapy better than people. In addition, the doses of medication are lower than those used in humans, so there are less reactions. This helps maintain a good quality of life for the patient. One of the biggest hurdles in treating these dogs aside from our personal reaction to chemotherapy is the expense.

Sometimes Prednisone, which is inexpensive, is used alone as therapy. It is not a chemotherapy. Initially, it is very impressive, completely resolving all clinical signs and returning dogs to near normal. Unfortunately, this is a short-lived response lasting one to three months. Also, using prednisone alone to treat the cancer, actually makes the cancer more resistant to responding to other chemotherapy. Prednisone should only be used as a single agent if true chemotherapy is absolutely not an option.

Currently, lymphoma is not curable, but it can be managed to give you more quality time with your dog. One day, this information will be obsolete. I look forward to that day!

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