Adjuvant Sirolimus Does Not Improve Outcome in Pet Dogs Receiving Standard-of-Care Therapy for Appendicular Osteosarcoma: A Prospective, Randomized Trial of 324 Dogs
MeSH headings : Amputation, Surgical; Animals; Bone Neoplasms / genetics; Bone Neoplasms / mortality; Bone Neoplasms / therapy; Bone Neoplasms / veterinary; Carboplatin / administration & dosage; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Combined Modality Therapy / veterinary; Dog Diseases / mortality; Dog Diseases / therapy; Dogs; Osteosarcoma / genetics; Osteosarcoma / mortality; Osteosarcoma / therapy; Osteosarcoma / veterinary; Pets; Prospective Studies; Signal Transduction / drug effects; Sirolimus / administration & dosage; Sirolimus / pharmacology; Survival Rate; TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases / metabolism; Treatment Outcome
TL;DR:
In a population of pet dogs nongenomically segmented for predicted mTOR inhibition response, sequentially administered adjuvant sirolimus, although well tolerated when added to a backbone of therapy, did not extend DFI or survival in dogs with appendicular osteosarcoma.
(via Semantic Scholar)