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Large-cell lymphoma in four cats after successful treatment of feline infectious peritonitis with oral GS-441524: a novel clinical observation.

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Journal of feline medicine and surgery 2026 Vol.28(4) p. 1098612X261434629 OA
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Buchta K, Meunier SM, Felten S, Erber K, Kipar A, Dorsch R

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Case series summaryFatal feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), caused by feline coronavirus (FCoV), can now be cured with GS-441524.

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APA Buchta K, Meunier SM, et al. (2026). Large-cell lymphoma in four cats after successful treatment of feline infectious peritonitis with oral GS-441524: a novel clinical observation.. Journal of feline medicine and surgery, 28(4), 1098612X261434629. https://doi.org/10.1177/1098612X261434629
MLA Buchta K, et al.. "Large-cell lymphoma in four cats after successful treatment of feline infectious peritonitis with oral GS-441524: a novel clinical observation.." Journal of feline medicine and surgery, vol. 28, no. 4, 2026, pp. 1098612X261434629.
PMID 41807351 ↗

Abstract

Case series summaryFatal feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), caused by feline coronavirus (FCoV), can now be cured with GS-441524. Only a few unexpected clinical and laboratory observations have been reported with treatment, including lymphocytosis, eosinophilia and long-term persistence of abdominal lymphadenomegaly. Yet immune overstimulation associated with FIP might have negative long-term consequences. This report describes four cases of large-cell lymphoma (LCL) arising within 2 years of FIP diagnosis and successful treatment with legally sourced oral GS-441524 (15 mg/kg q24h), representing an incidence of 2.0% (n = 4/202) in a large treatment cohort. At LCL diagnosis, two cats were aged under 2 years, one was aged 8 years and one was aged 13 years. All cats showed weight loss, three had hyporexia and two had chronic vomiting; all tested negative for feline leukaemia virus and feline immunodeficiency virus. LCL was diagnosed by histology (n = 3) or cytology (n = 1) at 81, 365 (n = 2) and 595 days after FIP diagnosis/treatment start. The cats died a median of 15.5 days after LCL diagnosis. Neither a high FCoV viral load nor FCoV antigen, as determined by semi-quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry, respectively, was detected in any of the available samples. PCR for antigen receptor rearrangements revealed a monoclonal B-cell population in two cats, supporting a diagnosis of large B-cell lymphoma.Relevance and novel informationThe incidence of LCL reported here among cats in remission from FIP after legally sourced oral GS-441524 treatment is remarkably high compared with the general feline population. LCL should be considered a potential 'long-FIP syndrome' and/or a long-term complication after GS-441524 treatment. The pathogenesis of LCL in this context requires further clarification.

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