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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with brain tumor treated by gene and vaccine therapy shows nerve

By Pluhar, G Elizabeth et al.·Published in Vaccine·2010·Department of Veterinary Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Anti-tumor immune response correlates with neurological symptoms in a dog with spontaneous astrocytoma treated by gene and vaccine therapy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with a low-grade brain tumor called gemistocytic astrocytoma and showed symptoms like temporary blindness and weakness on one side after receiving a combination of surgery, gene therapy, and vaccinations. The treatment involved removing part of the tumor and then using a special gene therapy along with vaccines made from tumor cells. After experiencing some neurological symptoms, the dog's condition improved, and all symptoms resolved. Remarkably, the dog has been tumor-free for over 450 days since the treatment.

People also search for: dog brain tumor treatment · gemistocytic astrocytoma in dogs · dog temporary blindness after vaccination

Abstract

Gene therapy and vaccination have been tested in malignant glioma patients with modest, albeit encouraging results. The combination of these therapies has demonstrated synergistic efficacy in murine models but has not been reported in large animals. Gemistocytic astrocytoma (GemA) is a low-grade glioma that typically progresses to lethal malignancy despite conventional therapies. Until now there has been no useful animal model of GemA. Here we report the treatment of a dog with spontaneous GemA using the combination of surgery, intracavitary adenoviral interferon gamma (IFNgamma) gene transfer, and vaccination with glioma cell lysates mixed with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides. Surgical tumor debulking and delivery of Ad-IFNgamma into the resection cavity were performed. Autologous tumor cells grew slowly in culture, necessitating vaccination with allogeneic tumor lysate in four of the five vaccinations. Transient left-sided blindness and hemiparesis occurred following the fourth and fifth vaccinations. These neurological symptoms correlated with a peak in the levels of tumor-reactive IgG and CD8(+) T cells measured in the blood. All symptoms resolved and this dog remains tumor-free over 450 days following surgery. This case report preliminarily demonstrates the feasibility of treating dogs with spontaneous glioma using immune-based therapy and warrants further study using this therapeutic approach.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20197146/