Adjuvant electrochemotherapy after debulking in canine bone osteosarcoma infiltration.
Maurício Martins TaquesRaul GuedertKleber MorenoMarcelo Monte Mor RangelDaniela Ota Hisayasu SuzukiPublished in: Artificial organs (2020)
Osteosarcoma is a bone cancer considered rare to humans, but common in dogs. Dogs and humans share genetic homology and environmental risk factors. Improving the treatment of osteosarcoma in dogs could also be relevant to improve procedures in humans. Traditional treatments of osteosarcoma involve surgery and chemotherapy. Such treatments are commonly aggressive and not possible for many patients. Electrochemotherapy emerges as a minimally invasive, effective, and safe treatment alternative. Electrochemotherapy combines applications of high-intensity electric fields during short periods with anti-cancer drugs to improve its medicine cytotoxicity. Analyzing the electric field distribution, as well as electric current density, are essential to electrochemotherapy success. This paper brings the first case of a canine osteosarcoma treatment performed with bleomycin and electrochemotherapy. We performed in silico studies with finite element method software to observe the electric field distribution. In silico experiments help to verify possibilities and limitations of treating bone destruction and macro or micro tumor infiltrations around the primary tumor mass. Results show that both needle or plate electrodes are feasible to remove the tumor even with invasion into the bone. Plate electrodes perform well in treating micro infiltrations when associated with conductive gel and direct contact between electrode and bone (without soft tissues). Needle electrodes are effective in treating tumor infiltration on external cortical bone. Multiple applications are needed to cover all cranium layers with sufficient electric field intensity. Electrochemotherapy protocol with needle or plate electrodes does not present sufficient electric current density capable of affecting brain tissue, even in cases of bone destruction.
Keyphrases
- bone mineral density
- high intensity
- minimally invasive
- soft tissue
- bone loss
- bone regeneration
- ultrasound guided
- randomized controlled trial
- reduced graphene oxide
- gene expression
- early stage
- postmenopausal women
- end stage renal disease
- risk assessment
- dna methylation
- molecular docking
- brain injury
- papillary thyroid
- radiation therapy
- white matter
- resistance training
- ejection fraction
- atrial fibrillation
- peritoneal dialysis
- coronary artery disease
- lymph node
- acute coronary syndrome
- prognostic factors
- locally advanced
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- smoking cessation
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- copy number
- robot assisted