MIAMI (AP) — Peanut, an 8-year-old orangutan with cancer and one of the star attractions at Miami’s Jungle Island, no longer needs chemotherapy, her medical team announced Tuesday.
Peanut had been undergoing chemotherapy since August, following a
diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. After three courses of combination
chemo-immunotherapy, her doctors decided it was time to wrap up her
treatments for the aggressive lymphoma.
Although Peanut was not the first great ape to be treated for cancer
like a human, experts said it is not common to use chemotherapy among
orangutans.
Dr. Jason Chatfield, curator and staff veterinarian for Jungle
Island, said the stress of ‘‘multiple immobilizations’’ for the
treatment was a factor in a decision to end her chemotherapy. He added
she received an adequate amount of chemotherapy.
‘‘What we do know is that without this chemotherapy, Peanut would not survive,’’ Chatfield said.
But he cautioned that imaging and scans used to gauge the
effectiveness of chemotherapy in humans isn’t available in Peanut’s
case, making it ‘‘next to impossible’’ to tell how effective the
treatment was for the orangutan.
Now her medical team will closely monitor Peanut’s daily progress and
check for signs of relapse. And as part of her annual medical exam,
doctors will also include diagnostic imaging such as a CT scan,
radiology and ultra sound.
Peanut and her fraternal twin, Pumpkin, were born in captivity. They
came to Jungle Island when they were 6 months old. The youngest of six
orangutans there, the two have been a hit with park visitors, using sign
language and an iPad to communicate with their trainers. The park has
posted regular updates of Peanut’s treatments on its main web page and
on Facebook.
Peanut was diagnosed after her veterinary team found she had an
intestinal obstruction and further testing revealed the cancer. Pumpkin
has not been diagnosed with the disease.
The Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami
Miller School of Medicine, along with UM’s Division of Comparative
Pathology, which specializes in wildlife, confirmed the diagnosis.
Doctors chose a plan for treatment that has been most effective in humans.
‘‘Peanut has handled this process with remarkable strength and
fortitude,’’ Chatfield said. ‘‘We have learned a great deal in the
process and endeavored to provide Peanut with state-of-the-art care and
the best possible chance at long term survival.’’
Peanut and her twin, Pumpkin, will celebrate their birthday on Dec. 2
with orangutan-friendly cakes. The park also will serve cake to guests
and hand out lime green ribbons for lymphoma awareness. A portion of the
day’s admission also will be donated to the cancer center involved in
the ape’s treatment.
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