APA
Cejalvo, Teresa & Perise-Barrios, Ana Judith & del Portillo, Isabel & Laborda, Eduardo & Rodriguez Milla, Miguel A. & Cubillo, Isabel & Vazquez, Fernando & Sardon, David & Ramirez, Manuel & Alemany, Ramon & del Castillo Magan, Noemi & García Castro, Javier (2018-09 ) .Remission of Spontaneous Canine Tumors after Systemic Cellular Viroimmunotherapy.
ISO 690
Cejalvo, Teresa & Perise-Barrios, Ana Judith & del Portillo, Isabel & Laborda, Eduardo & Rodriguez Milla, Miguel A. & Cubillo, Isabel & Vazquez, Fernando & Sardon, David & Ramirez, Manuel & Alemany, Ramon & del Castillo Magan, Noemi & García Castro, Javier. 2018-09 .Remission of Spontaneous Canine Tumors after Systemic Cellular Viroimmunotherapy.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39453
Resumen:
Dogs with spontaneous tumors treated
in veterinary hospitals offer an excellent oppor tunity for studyingimmunotherapies,including
oncolytic viruses. Oncolytic viruses have
advanced into the clinic as an intratumorally
administered therapeutic;however,intravenous
delivery has been hindered by neutralization in
the blood. To circumvent this hurdle, mesen chymal stem cells have been used as a "Trojan
horse." Here, we present the treatment of 27
canine patients with cancer with canine mesen chymal stem cells infected with ICOCAV17, a
canine oncolytic adenovirus. No significant
adverse effects were found. The response rate
was 74%, with 14.8% showing complete
responses, including total remissions of lung
metastasis. We detected virus infection, stromal
degeneration, and immune cell infiltration in
tumor biopsies after 4 weeks of treatment. The
increased presence of antiadenoviral antibodies
in the peripheral blood of treated dogs did not
appear to prevent the clinical benefit of this
therapy. These dataindicate that oncolytic virus es loaded in mesenchymal stem cells represent
an effective cancer immunotherapy