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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Safety of Innocell cancer immunotherapy injection in dogs with tumors

By Goodrich, Raymond P et al.·Published in Journal of immunology research·2020·Colorado State University, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pilot Acute Safety Evaluation of Innocell™ Cancer Immunotherapy in Canine Subjects.

Species:
dog
Canine melanomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

Three dogs with solid organ tumors received a new cancer treatment involving an injection of inactivated tumor cells and an immune booster. After the treatment, none of the dogs showed serious side effects, although one dog had a slight fever and seemed a bit tired. Blood tests indicated that the treatment successfully stimulated the immune system, with certain markers showing positive changes. Overall, the injection was well tolerated, and the researchers believe this treatment could help dogs with cancer, but more studies are needed to confirm its effectiveness.

People also search for: dog cancer treatment · canine immunotherapy safety · side effects of dog cancer injections

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We are developing cancer immunotherapy based on the use of autologous tumor tissue that has been rendered replication-incompetent but maintains phenotype and metabolic activity post-preparation. AIM: The aim of this study was to evaluate safety and tolerance to injection of the inactivated tumor cell and adjuvant preparation (Innocell™) within 24 hours of administration in a pilot study in canine patients with solid organ tumors.. Three canine patients demonstrating accessible solid organ tumors of various types were assessed in this study. The local site injection was monitored post-treatment. Clinical signs of adverse reactions were monitored for 24 hours post-treatment. Blood samples were taken pre-treatment and at 8 and 24 hours post-treatment for all subjects. One subject provided samples at 7 days post-treatment. All blood samples were analyzed for cytokine content for both immune system-associated and tumor-associated cytokines. RESULTS: No signs of adverse reactions at the site of injection or systemically were observed in the study period. A slight fever and lethargy were reported in one subject by the owner post-vaccination. Immune system-associated cytokine levels in two of the three animals were elevated post-treatment. Tumor-associated cytokine levels in all three subjects declined post-treatment from baseline levels with the effect most prominent in the subject with a non-excised tumor. CONCLUSION: Subcutaneous injection of the inactivated tumor cells and adjuvant was well tolerated in this pilot study. Cytokine responses observed were in line with the intended use of the treatment in stimulating immune response without adverse clinical observations. Additional evaluation is warranted.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33102607/