Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Safety of Semliki Forest virus cancer treatment tested in Beagle dogs
By Autio, Karoliina P M et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2015·Department of Equine and Small Animal Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Attenuated Semliki Forest virus for cancer treatment in dogs: safety assessment in two laboratory Beagles.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Two adult Beagles were given a special virus treatment to see if it could help fight their cancer. The virus showed it could kill cancer cells in the lab, and importantly, the dogs did not experience any negative side effects from the treatment. After receiving the virus, the dogs developed antibodies against it, indicating their immune system responded well. This study suggests that using this virus could be a safe option for treating cancer in dogs in the future.
People also search for: dog cancer treatment · Beagle cancer virus therapy · safe cancer treatments for dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dogs suffer from spontaneous tumors which may be amenable to therapies developed for human cancer patients, and dogs may serve as large-animal cancer models. A non-pathogenic Semliki Forest virus vector VA7-EGFP previously showed promise in targeting human tumor xenografts in mice, but the oncolytic capacity of the virus in canine cancer cells and the safety of the virus in higher mammals such as dogs, are not known. We therefore assessed the oncolytic potency of VA7-EGFP against canine cancer cells by infectivity and viability assays in two dog solid tumor cell lines. Furthermore we performed a 3-week safety study in two adult Beagles which received a single intravenous injection of ~2 × 10(5) plaque forming units of parental A7(74) strain. RESULTS: VA7-EGFP was able to replicate in and kill both canine cancer cell lines tested. No adverse events were observed in either of the two virus-injected adult Beagles and no infective virus could be recovered from any of the biological samples collected over the course of the study. Neutralizing antibodies to Semliki Forest virus became detectable in the dogs at 5 days post infection and remained elevated until study termination. CONCLUSIONS: Based on these results, testing of the oncolytic potential of attenuated Semliki Forest virus in canine cancer patients appears feasible.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26215394/