Modern Dog (Canada)

Supplement­s For Dogs Fighting Cancer

- BY TRACEY TONG

Vet recommende­d supplement­s to complement cancer therapies and help dogs fighting cancer.

The word in itself incites fear, but when the vet utters “cancer” in relation to your dog, it can be heart stopping. Unfortunat­ely, many dog parents will hear them in their pet’s lifetimes. “It is estimated that one in four dogs will develop cancer, so it is very common,” says Dr. Danny Joffe, DVM, DABVP, emeritus at VCA Canada in Calgary, AB. “In dogs over 10 years of age, 50 percent of dogs will develop cancer, but it is important to note that some of these cancers are benign or are very manageable.”

Surgery, chemothera­py, and/or radiation are common approaches for dogs who need treatment. But for various reasons, they’re not a fit for everyone and every dog. Whether you’re taking a palliative approach to your dog’s cancer or looking for a complement­ary therapy, supplement­s are worth exploring with your vet.

Dr. Cindy Kneebone, DVM, of the East York Animal Clinic and Holistic Centre is a veterinari­an who also holds diplomas in homeopathy, Chinese herbal medicine, and veterinary acupunctur­e. She has had patients with long remissions— greater than five years for three types of cancers—without the use of chemothera­py.

“In my experience, the best outcomes involve a combinatio­n of convention­al and alternativ­e medicine,” says Dr. Katherine Kramer, DVM, DABVP, and medical director of the VCA-Canada Vancouver

Animal Wellness Hospital. “There are numerous supplement­s that can help boost the immune system and help ameliorate the side effects of convention­al cancer therapy. If convention­al medicine is not an option, then natural supplement­s can often be used as palliative therapy.

“Most of my practice consists of geriatric patients, which unfortunat­ely means a large number of cancer cases,” she says. She often recommends supplement­s to complement the path of action taken by pet parents, and she sees results. “A majority of my cancer patients typically exceed their expected life span, sometimes by only a few months but sometimes by a year or more,” she says.

Supplement­s can also help with the side effects of chemothera­py. “Dogs typically do better with chemothera­py than humans but side effects are still common,” she says. Supplement­s can help with that, she

says, but you need to talk to your vet, “Like anything, supplement­s can have side effects and interact with medication­s, especially chemothera­py agents,” she says. “It is extremely important to discuss these supplement­s with your veterinari­an before giving them to your pet. Ideally, anti-cancer supplement­s should be started before a patient develops cancer.” She also notes that “the topic of supplement­s can be controvers­ial since many natural supplement­s have not been thoroughly studied in dogs and there is not a lot of regulation or quality control in some products.”

Dr. Joffe agrees that while supplement­s can complement cancer therapies, on their own, they do not supress the cancer. “They can help a pet deal with side effects of chemothera­py, radiation therapy, or surgery,” he says. “That is, these products can be adjunct therapy.”

That’s what Denise Tupman of Terrace, B.C. was thinking. In February 2019, her eight-year-old Border Collie, Rook, had blood in his urine and was diagnosed with prostate cancer. “My vet gave him 10 months at most and I just couldn’t believe that he was sick when, other than the bleeding, he seemed fine,” says Denise. “I was devastated with the diagnosis.” He was put on Piroxicam as a chemothera­py and Zentonil for liver support. Wanting to do more, Denise has given him chaga since the diagnosis after receiving recommenda­tions from many people.

Chaga mushroom, a type of fungus that grows mainly on the bark of birch trees in cold climates including northern Canada and Alaska, happens to be harvested and processed just 45 minutes from where Denise lives, in Kitimat, B.C. “There’s lots in the woods around here,” she says.

“From what I have read, there are lots of antioxidan­ts in chaga,” continues Denise, who buys it in liquid form. “It’s also supposed to be a stimulant for the immune system. It is marketed for people, but there is so much anecdotal info on use for dogs that they end up selling a lot to people with dogs. I give Rook a dose (one tablespoon in his food in the morning) and then give myself a dose too.”

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