AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess if flow cytometry can evaluate the extent of lymphoma in dogs and if liver and spleen fine-needle aspirates are suitable for this analysis.
  • A total of 44 dogs with different types of lymphoma and 5 healthy dogs were examined, with various samples collected and analyzed through flow cytometry, revealing differences in log(T:B) values based on lymphoma type.
  • Most samples were suitable for analysis, with flow cytometry detecting extranodal lymphoma involvement in 70% of cases, showing good agreement with cytologic findings, but further research is recommended.

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine whether the extent of disease in dogs with lymphoma can be assessed via flow cytometry and to evaluate the suitability of fine-needle aspirates from the liver and spleen of dogs for flow cytometric examination.

Animals: 44 dogs with multicentric B-cell (n = 35) or T-cell lymphoma (9) and 5 healthy control dogs. Procedures-Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples and fine-needle aspirates of lymph node, liver, and spleen were examined via flow cytometry. Logarithmically transformed T-cell-to-B-cell percentage ratio (log[T:B]) values were calculated. Thresholds defined by use of log(T:B) values of samples from control dogs were used to determine extranodal lymphoma involvement in lymphoma-affected dogs; results were compared with cytologic findings.

Results: 12 of 245 (5%) samples (9 liver, 1 spleen, and 2 bone marrow) had insufficient cellularity for flow cytometric evaluation. Mean log(T:B) values of samples from dogs with B-cell lymphoma were significantly lower than those of samples from the same site in dogs with T-cell lymphoma and in control dogs. In dogs with T-cell lymphoma, the log(T:B) of lymph node, bone marrow, and spleen samples was significantly higher than in control dogs. Of 165 samples assessed for extranodal lymphoma involvement, 116 (70%) tested positive via flow cytometric analysis; results agreed with cytologic findings in 133 of 161 (83%) samples evaluated via both methods.

Conclusions And Clinical Relevance: Results suggested that flow cytometry may aid in detection of extranodal lymphoma involvement in dogs, but further research is needed. Most fine-needle aspirates of liver and spleen were suitable for flow cytometric evaluation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.73.6.884DOI Listing

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