Prognostic Utility of the Flow Cytometry and Clonality Analysis Results for Feline Lymphomas

Author:

Kapoor Sheena1,Sen Sushmita1,Tsang Josephine1,Yap Qi-Jing1,Park Stanley1,Cromarty Jerry1,Swartzfager Deanna1,Choy Kevin2ORCID,Lim Sungwon1ORCID,Koo Jamin13,Holcomb Ilona1

Affiliation:

1. ImpriMed, Inc., 1130 Independence Avenue, Mountain View, CA 94043, USA

2. BluePearl Pet Hospital, Kirkland, WA 98034, USA

3. Department of Chemical Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Feline lymphoma, a prevalent cancer in cats, exhibits varied prognoses influenced by anatomical site and cellular characteristics. In this study, we investigated the utility of flow cytometry and clonality analysis via PCR for antigen receptor rearrangement (PARR) with respect to characterizing the disease and predicting prognosis. For this purpose, we received fine needle aspirates and/or blood from 438 feline patients, which were subjected to flow cytometry analysis and PARR. We used a subset of the results from patients with confirmed B- or T-cell lymphomas for comparison to cytological or histological evaluation (n = 53). Using them as a training set, we identified the optimal set of flow cytometry parameters, namely forward scatter thresholds, for cell size categorization by correlating with cytology-defined sizes. Concordance with cytological sizing among this training set was 82%. Furthermore, 90% concordance was observed when the proposed cell sizing was tested on an independent test set (n = 24), underscoring the reliability of the proposed approach. Additionally, lymphoma subtypes defined by flow cytometry and PARR demonstrated significant survival differences, validating the prognostic utility of these methods. The proposed methodology achieves high concordance with cytological evaluations and provides an additional tool for the characterization and management of feline lymphoproliferative diseases.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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