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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Improved survival in dogs with melanoma after surgery and gene

By Finocchiaro, Liliana M E et al.·Published in Human gene therapy·2015·Unidad de Transferencia Gen&#xe9·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cytokine-Enhanced Vaccine and Interferon-β plus Suicide Gene Therapy as Surgery Adjuvant Treatments for Spontaneous Canine Melanoma.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with malignant melanoma, a serious skin cancer, underwent surgery followed by a new treatment combining a genetic vaccine and interferon therapy. This approach significantly improved their chances of staying cancer-free after surgery, with 83% of dogs remaining disease-free compared to just 11% with surgery alone. Additionally, the overall survival rate increased dramatically, with some dogs living over 2,251 days without recurrence or metastasis. This promising treatment not only extended life but also maintained a good quality of life for the dogs involved.

People also search for: dog melanoma treatment · canine cancer vaccine · surgery for dog skin cancer

Abstract

We present here a nonviral immunogene therapy trial for canine malignant melanoma, an aggressive disease displaying significant clinical and histopathological overlapping with human melanoma. As a surgery adjuvant approach, it comprised the co-injection of lipoplexes bearing herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase and canine interferon-β genes at the time of surgery, combined with the periodic administration of a subcutaneous genetic vaccine composed of tumor extracts and lipoplexes carrying the genes of human interleukin-2 and human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. Following complete surgery (CS), the combined treatment (CT) significantly raised the portion of local disease-free canine patients from 11% to 83% and distant metastases-free (M0) from 44% to 89%, as compared with surgery-only-treated controls (ST). Even after partial surgery (PS), CT better controlled the systemic disease (M0: 82%) than ST (M0: 48%). Moreover, compared with ST, CT caused a significant 7-fold (CS) and 4-fold (PS) rise of overall survival, and >17-fold (CS) and >13-fold (PS) rise of metastasis-free survival. The dramatic increase of PS metastasis-free survival (>1321 days) and CS recurrence- and metastasis-free survival (both >2251 days) demonstrated that CT was shifting a rapidly lethal disease into a chronic one. In conclusion, this surgery adjuvant CT was able of significantly delaying or preventing postsurgical recurrence and distant metastasis, increasing disease-free and overall survival, and maintaining the quality of life. The high number of canine patients involved in CT (301) and the extensive follow-up (>6 years) with minimal or absent toxicity warrant the long-term safety and efficacy of this treatment. This successful clinical outcome justifies attempting a similar scheme for human melanoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25762364/