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A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats

Elise Martens et al · Oxford University Press · 2025

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ABSTRACT Background Chemotherapy extravasation is a potentially serious complication. There is a paucity of information in the veterinary literature investigating extravasation events, treatments, and outcomes. Objective Evaluate chemotherapy extravasation events and treatments in dogs and cats, adverse events (AEs), and overall outcomes. Animals Twenty dogs and three cats were included. Methods Retrospective, multicenter, descriptive study including dogs or cats with suspected extravasation from chemotherapy. Information obtained included: signalment, extravasation details and treatment provided, AEs graded according to VCOG‐CTCAE v2 criteria, and outcome. Results The most common drug extravasated was doxorubicin, followed by carboplatin. Carboplatin extravasation (n = 5) resulted in Grades III–IV AEs, all of which required surgical debridement. Doxorubicin extravasation (n = 9) resulted in Grades 0–V AEs, two of which amputation was ultimately recommended, and one of those two was euthanized instead. Extravasation of vinca alkaloids (n = 5) and rabacfosadine (n = 1) resulted in Grades II–III AEs, all managed in the outpatient setting. Mitoxantrone (n = 2) and dacarbazine (n = 1) extravasation resulted in no clinical signs associated with extravasation injury. Seventy‐eight percent (18/23) cases had extravasation occur during one of the first four treatments of chemotherapy, with 30% (7/23) occurring during the first chemotherapy treatment. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Most cases (20/23) had mild to moderate or no AEs. Findings support that carboplatin should be considered a vesicant.

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APA 7

al, E. M. E. (2025). A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats. https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.70042

MLA

al, Elise Martens et. "A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats." 2025. https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.70042.

Chicago

al, Elise Martens et. 2025. "A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats.". https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.70042.

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al, E. M. E. 2025, A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats, Oxford University Press, available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.70042 [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

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Título
A Retrospective Study of Chemotherapy‐Related Extravasation Events in Dogs and Cats
Autor / colaboradores
Elise Martens et al
Editorial
Oxford University Press
Año de publicación
2025
ISSN
0891-6640
ISSN
0891-6640
Idioma
eng

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