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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Batman Begins! Brain tumors in dogs and their experimental means of destruction

August 23, 2008 / (6) comments


I just read an article in the Atlanta Journal Constitution Online on a Lab mix named Batman and his role in the quest for the cure. Yes, in case you haven’t been aware, pet volunteers are sometimes employed in the search for a cure to cancer.

In this case, Batman’s vicious glioma, the kind of tumor Senator Kennedy and my Sophie Sue also have in common, is being treated with a novel technique designed to create an individualized vaccine for the cancer once tumor cells from the mass have been surgically harvested.

That means Batman’s had to go under the knife for a special biopsy. Next, his cells will be grown in a tissue culture and later re-injected into his body in the hopes that an immunological response might crush the remaining cells into submission.

No one knows whether this technique will work—and if it does, for how long. But medical science is hot on the trail for novel ways to kill cancer and this is one path we’ve seen work before.

Take the case of the melanoma vaccine. We know that injecting dogs with this actually works. Sure, not every melanoma patient is a candidate, but the majority of dogs treated thus do respond. Their bodies mount an immune response which kills cancer cells where they hide, limiting the spread of the notoriously nasty melanoma variety of cancer.

On a personal note, I couldn’t help feeling exceptionally envious upon reading of Batman’s entrée into the annals of comparative human-animal medicine. Not only does he enjoy the distinction of being one of the first dogs to undergo this technique, one that may change how the rest of us fight our cancers (dogs and humans alike), he got a free ride in the process.

Sure, Sophie’s cancer isn’t the most surgically amenable (due to its location in the brainstem) and therefore she likely won’t be a candidate in her limited future, but knowing that Batman’s paving the way is enough to take more than a bit of the sting out of Sophie’s comparably low-tech radiation treatments.

You go, Batman! You're our hero!

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COMMENTS (6)
1
by on 06/10/2009 05:13am

Transfer VHS to DVD                 Convert VHS

2
by on 08/25/2008 09:17am

I've got a Sophie Sue post coming up! In three hours she'll be 100% done with her 18 courses of radiation!! Yay!

3
by on 08/24/2008 09:51pm

This is fantastic news! A win-win solution for everyone, including the dogs. Hopefully the side effects aren't too bad, but when the alternative is to do nothing and death, the risk is relative.
Thanks for sharing.

4
by on 08/23/2008 07:43pm

I . too, would like to hear Sophie's update on her health. I hope Batman does respond to this new technique; it would mean so much towards finding a way to rid the world of this terrible evil: cancer.

5
by on 08/23/2008 10:37am

Can we get a Sophie update? I always wonder how she's doing when you post.

6
by on 08/23/2008 09:00am

Here's the link to the story on Batman:
http://www.ajc.com/health/content/health/stories/2...

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About fully vetted

Patty Khuly, VMD, MBA

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Dr. Khuly is a former petMD blogger and small animal veterinarian in Miami, Florida, where she practices medicine at Sunset Animal Clinic and serves on the board of the South Florida Veterinary Medical Association. She is a graduate of Wellesley College, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, and The Wharton School of Business.

As a significant sideline, she writes...a lot. She authors pet health columns for USA Today, The Miami Herald and Vetstreet. She also writes a popular monthly column for Veterinary Practice News and serves as regular contributor to Veterinary Economics, The Bark, and the Veterinary News Network.

Dr. Khuly lives in South Miami with her brood of hens, goats, dogs, cats...and humans.

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