Veterinary Oncology: Treating Cancer in Pets

 

Veterinary Oncology

Cancer is a disease that affects both humans and animals. As veterinary medicine advances, oncology is becoming an important specialty for treating cancer in pets. Veterinary oncologists work tirelessly to help our furry family members battle this devastating disease.


What is Veterinary Oncology?

Veterinary oncology is the veterinary specialty that focuses on the diagnosis, treatment, and management of cancer in animals. Veterinary oncologists are veterinarians who have received extensive training in veterinary internal medicine as well as a three-year residency program specializing in oncology. They handle all aspects of pet cancer care including diagnosis, surgical oncology, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, pain management, and palliative care/hospice services. Their goal is to deliver the highest quality cancer treatment to pets using all available therapy options.

Veterinary Oncology treat various types of cancers in animals including lymphoma, mast cell tumors, bone cancer, soft tissue sarcomas, melanoma, and carcinomas of organs like the liver, kidneys, lungs, etc. Cancers in pets are diagnosed and treated very similarly to human cancers. Advanced diagnostic tests like ultrasound, CT, MRI, and pathology exams are utilized to detect and stage tumors. Treatment plans are then tailored to each individual pet based on factors like cancer type, stage, location, age, and overall health.

Surgical Oncology

For many solid tumors in pets, surgery is the primary or adjunct treatment option. Veterinary surgical oncologists are highly skilled at removingcancerous growths while preserving important functions and minimizing surgical effects. They conduct tumor resections, limb amputations, organ removals, biopsies, and more to remove as much of the tumor as possible. Thorough surgical staging also helps determine if cancer has spread from the primary site. Adjuvant therapies may be recommended post-surgery to kill any remaining cancer cells and prevent recurrence. With advances in surgical techniques and anesthesia protocols, pets tolerate cancer surgeries very well.

Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy utilizes cytotoxic drugs to destroy cancer cells throughout the body. Chemotherapy protocols for pets are tailored specifically for each cancer type based on veterinary clinical trials. Common chemo agents include oral medications, injectables administered during hospital visits, or medications infused through a catheter placed in a central vein (chemoport). Side effects of chemotherapy like nausea, fatigue, and hair loss are carefully managed. Chemotherapy has proven effective for treating manyforms of pet lymphomas and solid tumors when used alone or along with other therapies. It allows for organ-sparing options compared to surgery alone for certain cancers.

Radiation Therapy

Similar to human radiation oncology, veterinary radiation therapy delivers precisely targeted radiation beams to destroy cancer cells and shrink tumors. It is most commonly used as definitive treatment for oral tumors, skin cancers, brain tumors, and certain other cancers not amenable to surgery. Pets receive treatments painlessly under anesthesia over several sessions. Radiation oncologists maximize doses to tumorswhile minimizing radiation exposure to surrounding healthy tissue. Newer modalities like stereotactic radiosurgery enable even more focused high dose beams for tumors. Radiation offers organ preservation and a non-invasive option for certain petcancers.

Integrative Treatment Approaches

Veterinary oncologists recognize that every patient is unique. For the best outcomes, a multidisciplinary integrative approach combining several treatment modalities is often adopted. Common integrative treatment protocols may combine surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, pain management, nutritional support, physical therapy/acupuncture, and psycho-social intervention through pet hospice and grief support programs. Quality of life is a top priority throughout cancer treatment and end-of-life care. Advanced diagnostics, imaging modalities, and novel therapies are constantly evolving to benefit more pets living longer lives beyond a cancer diagnosis.

Current Challenges and Future Promise

While outcomes have significantly improved over the past few decades, there remain therapeutic challenges in veterinary oncology similar to human medicine. Cancers resistant to standard therapies, cancers with early metastasis, and refractory or recurrent cancers continue to pose hurdles for complete remission and long-term survival goals. Ongoing clinical research efforts aim to develop new targeted drugs mirroring advances in human oncology. Areas of intense investigation include immunotherapy research, cancer stem cell targeting, nanotechnology drug delivery systems, and early cancer detection strategies through blood or urine biomarkers. The future promises even more species-specific anti-cancer innovations giving veterinarians more tools in their battle to help our pets win their fight against cancer.

Veterinary oncology has made phenomenal strides in utilizing all available modalities to effectively treat pet cancers and improve quality of life. Multidisciplinary integrative care and a supportive client-veterinarian relationship are key for successful cancer management in pets. With ongoing innovation and advancements in new anti-cancer therapies, the field of veterinary oncology will continue progressing to help more furry family members live longer and healthier lives beyond their cancer diagnosis.

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