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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vaccine using dog's own cells for breast cancer treatment

By Bird, R Curtis et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary science·2019·Department of Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Autologous hybrid cell fusion vaccine in a spontaneous intermediate model of breast carcinoma.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A female dog with breast cancer underwent a new treatment involving a special vaccine made from her own immune cells fused with cancer cells. After her surgery, she received this vaccine three times over several weeks, along with additional therapy. The results were promising, as dogs that received the vaccine lived significantly longer—over 600 days on average—compared to those who did not receive it. This approach not only extended their lives but also seemed to improve their quality of life.

People also search for: dog breast cancer treatment · canine mammary tumor vaccine · how long can a dog live with breast cancer

Abstract

Breast cancer is among the most common malignancies affecting women and reproductively intact female dogs, resulting in death from metastatic disease if not treated effectively. To better manage the disease progression, canine mammary tumor (CMT) cells derived from malignant canine mammary cancers were fused to autologous dendritic cells (DCs) to produce living hybrid-cell fusion vaccines for canine patients diagnosed with spontaneous mammary carcinoma. The high-speed sorting of rare autologous canine patient DCs from the peripheral blood provides the autologous component of fusion vaccines, and fusion to major histocompatibility complex-unmatched CMT cells were produced at high rates. The vaccinations were delivered to each patient following a surgical resection 3 times at 3-week intervals in combination with immuno-stimulatory oligonucleotides and Gemcitabine adjunct therapy. The immunized patient animals survived 3.3-times longer (median survival 611 days) than the control patients (median survival 184 days) and also appeared to exhibit an enhanced quality of life. A comparison of vaccinated patients diagnosed with inflammatory mammary carcinoma resulted in a very short median survival (42 days), suggesting no effect of vaccination. The data showed that the development of autologous living DC-based vaccine strategies in patient animals designed to improve the management of canine mammary carcinoma can be successful and may allow an identification of the antigens that can be translatable to promote effective immunity in canine and human patients.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31565891/