| Literature DB >> 28031824 |
Jiwon S Park1, Sita S Withers2, Jaime F Modiano3, Michael S Kent4, Mingyi Chen5, Jesus I Luna6, William T N Culp4, Ellen E Sparger7, Robert B Rebhun4, Arta M Monjazeb8, William J Murphy9,10, Robert J Canter11.
Abstract
Despite recent major clinical breakthroughs in human cancer immunotherapy including the use of checkpoint inhibitors and engineered T cells, important challenges remain, including determining the sub-populations of patients who will respond and who will experience at times significant toxicities. Although advances in cancer immunotherapy depend on preclinical testing, the majority of in-vivo testing currently relies on genetically identical inbred mouse models which, while offering critical insights regarding efficacy and mechanism of action, also vastly underrepresent the heterogeneity and complex interplay of human immune cells and cancers. Additionally, laboratory mice uncommonly develop spontaneous tumors, are housed under specific-pathogen free conditions which markedly impacts immune development, and incompletely model key aspects of the tumor/immune microenvironment. The canine model represents a powerful tool in cancer immunotherapy research as an important link between murine models and human clinical studies. Dogs represent an attractive outbred combination of companion animals that experience spontaneous cancer development in the setting of an intact immune system. This allows for study of complex immune interactions during the course of treatment while also directly addressing long-term efficacy and toxicity of cancer immunotherapies. However, immune dissection requires access to robust and validated immune assays and reagents as well as appropriate numbers for statistical evaluation. Canine studies will need further optimization of these important mechanistic tools for this model to fulfill its promise as a model for immunotherapy. This review aims to discuss the canine model in the context of existing preclinical cancer immunotherapy models to evaluate both its advantages and limitations, as well as highlighting its growth as a powerful tool in the burgeoning field of both human and veterinary immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer immunotherapy; Canine model; Murine model; Outbred; Spontaneous cancer
Year: 2016 PMID: 28031824 PMCID: PMC5171656 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0200-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Summary of Commonly Used Immunotherapy Models/Systems
Common Canine Cancers with Key Demographic Features
| Cancer | Incidence | Age of Onset (years) | Location | Breeds at Elevated Riska |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gliomas | 2–3X more common in dogs than people | Variable, majority > 6 | Intracranial | Boxers, bulldogs, and terriers |
| Lymphoma | ~250,000 new cases per year (2/3 B cell lymphoma) | 7–10 | Multicentric/external lymph nodes | Golden Retriever, Boxers, Bullmastiffs, Basset Hounds, Saint Bernards, Scottish Terriers, Airedales, Bulldogs |
| Mammary Carcinoma | Uncommon in spayed female dogs, 10–15% of unspayed females | 10–11 | Breast tissue | Poodles, Dachshunds, and Spaniels |
| Melanoma | 5–10% of dog cancer deaths | ≥10 | Mouth, toenail bed, and skin | Terriers, Retrievers, Schnauzers, and Chow Chows |
| Osteosarcoma | 50,000–75,000 cases per year (~75X more common in dogs) | Bimodal, highest peak at age 7–10 | Axial and appendicular skeleton | Labradors, Golden Retrievers, German Shepherds, Dobermans, Weimeraners, Boxers, Great Danes, Rottweilers, Irish Wolfhounds |
| Soft Tissue Sarcoma (e.g. Fibrosarcoma, Myxosarcoma, Hemangiosarcoma) | ~10X more common in dogs than humans | All ages | Soft tissues | Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever, German Shepherd, Bernese Mountain Dog |
aData on breed predisposition of specific cancers are potentially subject to reporting bias given differences in breed popularity and differences in how owners may seek veterinary care
Phenotype of Canine Immune Subsets
| Cell | Positive CD Markers | Negative CD Markers |
|---|---|---|
| Helper T cell | CD4,a CD45 | CD21 |
| Cytotoxic T cell | CD8, CD45, IFN-γ | CD21 |
| Activated Memory T cell | CD25, CD44, CD45, CD69 | CD62L |
| Regulatory T cell | CD4, CD25, CD45, FoxP3 | CD8 |
| B cell | CD22, CD79a, CD45, CD25, MHC2 | TCR |
| Dendritic cell | CD11c, MHC II, CD80, CD14 | N/A |
| Macrophage | MHC II, Mac-3/Lamp2/107b, F4/80, CD11b, CD206 | N/A |
| Natural Killer cell | CD5 dim, CD45, MHC1, MHC2, NKp46 | CD5 (after 14 days in culture), CD4, CD21 |
aPossibly unique to canines, CD4 is expressed in granulocytes. Similar to other species, CD4 is expressed in a subset of monocyte-derived cells
Fig. 1Efficacy of Radiation + CpG + 1MT in a Canine Clinical Trial. Canines with metastatic melanoma and sarcoma were accrued to a pilot clinical trial at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine [98]. a. Baseline computed tomography of the thorax demonstrates untreated metastatic lesions in a dog with buccal melanoma. b. One month after local RT and intra-lesional CPG to the primary tumor combined with systemic indolamine-2,3 dioxygenase (IDO) inhibition, there is complete regression of some lesions and partial regression of others. Arrows denote index lesions