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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vaccine helps dogs with invasive brain tumor make tumor-killing

By Andersen, Brian M et al.·Published in Cancer research·2013·Department of Pediatrics, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Vaccination for invasive canine meningioma induces in situ production of antibodies capable of antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with malignant brain tumors called meningiomas underwent surgery followed by a vaccine treatment designed to boost their immune response against the tumors. The vaccine was well tolerated, and only one dog experienced tumor growth that needed further treatment during the follow-up period of nearly two years. All dogs developed antibodies that targeted the tumors, and these antibodies were able to attack tumor cells effectively. This promising approach suggests that vaccine therapy could be a viable option for treating aggressive brain tumors in dogs and potentially in humans as well.

People also search for: dog meningioma treatment · canine brain tumor vaccine · dog tumor immunotherapy

Abstract

Malignant and atypical meningiomas are resistant to standard therapies and associated with poor prognosis. Despite progress in the treatment of other tumors with therapeutic vaccines, this approach has not been tested preclinically or clinically in these tumors. Spontaneous canine meningioma is a clinically meaningful but underutilized model for preclinical testing of novel strategies for aggressive human meningioma. We treated 11 meningioma-bearing dogs with surgery and vaccine immunotherapy consisting of autologous tumor cell lysate combined with toll-like receptor ligands. Therapy was well tolerated, and only one dog had tumor growth that required intervention, with a mean follow up of 585 days. IFN-γ-elaborating T cells were detected in the peripheral blood of 2 cases, but vaccine-induced tumor-reactive antibody responses developed in all dogs. Antibody responses were polyclonal, recognizing both intracellular and cell surface antigens, and HSP60 was identified as one common antigen. Tumor-reactive antibodies bound allogeneic canine and human meningiomas, showing common antigens across breed and species. Histologic analysis revealed robust infiltration of antibody-secreting plasma cells into the brain around the tumor in posttreatment compared with pretreatment samples. Tumor-reactive antibodies were capable of inducing antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity to autologous and allogeneic tumor cells. These data show the feasibility and immunologic efficacy of vaccine immunotherapy for a large animal model of human meningioma and warrant further development toward human trials.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23471847/