| Literature DB >> 29915788 |
Galina V Ilyinskaya1,2, Elena V Mukhina3, Alesya V Soboleva1,4, Olga V Matveeva5, Peter M Chumakov1,4.
Abstract
Background: Canine mastocytomas (mast cell tumors) represent a common malignancy among many dog breeds. A typical treatment strategy for canine mastocytomas includes surgery, chemo- and radio-therapy, although in many cases the therapy fails and the disease progression resumes. New treatment approaches are needed. Aims: The goal of this pilot study was to examine safety and efficacy of oncolytic Sendai virus therapy administered to canine patients with cutaneous or subcutaneous mastocytomas. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: MCT; Sendai virus; canine mastocytoma; mast cell tumor; oncolytic virus; virotherapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29915788 PMCID: PMC5995045 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Outcomes of clinical testing of varying MCT treatment protocols.
| 1 | Lomustine (CCNU), (cell cycle neutral) | 19 | Grades 1–3 | Neutropenia | ( |
| Eight dogs had a measurable response. One dog had a durable complete response for 440 days. Seven dogs had a partial response for a median duration of 77 days. Six dogs had stable disease for a median duration of 78 days. | |||||
| 2 | Lomustine | 81 | Non-resectable, grades 2 or 3 | Neutropenia or gastrointestinal effects, grades 3 and 4 (86%), hepatopathy (33%) | ( |
| One dog showed partial response. Seven dogs had stable disease at the end of the study. | |||||
| 3 | Lomustine combined with prednisone | 12 | Incompletely excised, grade 2 | Two fatal liver failures | ( |
| Seven dogs survived 2 years without disease progression. Two died from liver failure, indicating substantial liver toxicity of the two-drug combination. | |||||
| 4 | Surgical cytoreduction, radiation | 31 | Incompletely excised, grade 3 | Not reported | ( |
| Eleven dogs were alive at least 1 year without evidence of disease progression. Seventeen dogs died or were euthanized because of disease progression. The median disease free survival was 839 days. Median duration of overall survival was 845 days. Dogs with tumors ≤ 3 cm maximum diameter before surgery survived longer than dogs with tumors >3 cm. The remission rate was 65% and survival rate was 71% at 1 year after treatment. | |||||
| 5 | Surgical cytoreduction, radiation, prednisone | 19 | Cutaneous MCT, stage 2 | Not reported | ( |
| The median disease-free survival was 1,240 days. | |||||
| 6 | Surgery, radiation, prednisone/vinblastine | 61 | High risk for metastasis | Neutropenia, grades 3–4 (6.5%) | ( |
| Twenty-four dogs developed disease progression. The median progression-free interval was 1,305 days, and the median overall survival was not reached. Sixty-five percent of all animals were alive at 3 years, but all dogs with grade 2 disease were alive at 3 years. The median overall survival for dogs with grade 3 disease was 1,374 days. | |||||
| 7 | Surgical cytoreduction, radiation, vinblastine, lomustine, and prednisone | 21 | Grade 2, stage 2 | Neutropenia, hepatotoxicity, grade 2–3 toxicities (63%) | ( |
| Dogs that were treated with radiation, surgery, and chemotherapy had longer median overall survival than those that were treated only with surgery and chemotherapy (2,056 days vs. 1,103, respectively). | |||||
| 8 | Vinblastine, lomustine, and prednisone | 17 | Non-resectable, grades 2 and 3 | Hepatotoxicity (9%) | ( |
| Five showed a complete response and six a partial response. The median progression-free survival time among treated dogs was 489 days. | |||||
| 9 | Vinorelbine | 24 | Previously untreated cutaneous MCT | Neutropenia and gastrointestinal toxicity, grade 1-3 | ( |
| One dog achieved complete and two partial responses. The response was measured after only 1 week and only after single dose of the drug injection. | |||||
| 10 | Prednosolone, chlorambucil | 21 | Non-resectable, grades 2 and 3 | Not reported | ( |
| Three dogs achieved a complete response and five partial responses. The median progression-free interval for the eight responders was 533 days, and the median survival time for all dogs in the study was 140 days. | |||||
| 11 | Paclitaxel (Paccal Vet) | 29 | Non-resectable, grades 2 or 3 | Neutropenia, grades 3–4 and leucopenia, grades 1–2 | ( |
| Complete or partial responses were observed in more than half of the animals. The median time to progression in treated animals was 247 days. | |||||
| 12 | Paclitaxel | 168 | Advanced stage, non-resectable, grades 2 or 3 | Neutropenia or gastrointestinal effects, grades 3 and 4 (73%) | ( |
| Three percent of dogs showed complete and ~60% partial response or stable disease at the end of the study. Paclitaxel treated dogs were 6.5 times more likely than lomustine treated dogs to respond to chemotherapy. | |||||
| 13 | Mastinib | 200 | Non-metastatic recurrent or non-resectable, grades 2 or 3 | Gastrointestinal toxicity, grades 1 and 2 (36%) | ( |
| Treatment for 168 days significantly increased median time to disease progression (75 days in the placebo group and 118 days in the treatment group). The overall median survival time was 340 days in the placebo group and 491 days in the treatment group. The difference between placebo and treatment groups in median survival time duration reached significance only among the dogs with tumors expressing a mutant form of the c-KIT gene (182 vs. 417 days). For the entire population of dogs this difference was not significant. | |||||
| 14 | Mastinib | 132 | Non-resectable, grades 2 or 3 | Gastrointestinal toxicity, grades 2 and 3 | ( |
| Complete responses were observed in 6 out of 67 treated dogs. Treatment for two years significantly increased median survival time (322 days for the placebo group and 617 days in the treatment group). | |||||
| 15 | Toceranib (Palladia), FDA approved | 145 | Reoccurred MCT | Gastrointestinal effects, grades 3 and 4 (34 %) | ( |
| Animals received medication every other day for 6 weeks. Twenty-one dogs achieved complete and 41 partial response. Among the 62 responders, the median duration of the objective response and time to tumor progression were 84 and 126 days, respectively. | |||||
Summary of side effects that occurred during Sendai virus therapy.
| Pyrexia (20 h after the injection) | Cases 2 and 3 |
| Asthenia | Cases 3 and 5 |
| Edema at the site of injection | Case 4 |
| Vomiting | 0 |
| Diarrhea | 0 |
| Pain or tenderness at site of injection | Case 3, 4, and 5 |
| Musculoskeletal pain | 0 |
| Decreased appetite | Case 3 |
All side effects were classified as grade 1 according to common terminology criteria for adverse events of the Veterinary Cooperative Oncology Group 2 (.
Figure 1Oncolytic Sendai virus MCT treatments results (Cases 1 and 2). Case 1. Male dog of mixed breed of 7 years old was presented with cutaneous, ulcerated, and poorly differentiated mastocytoma (35 mm diameter) located near his anus. The tumor stage was not assigned. (1) Primary tumor before any treatment; (2) MCT site, 2 weeks after the first virus treatment; (3) MCT site, 4 weeks after the first virus treatment. Case 2. Male German shorthaired pointer of 9 years old was presented with subcutaneous, regional (stage 2) intermediately differentiated mastocytoma. The primary tumor was excised without clean margins (is not shown). (1) MCT secondary growth 1 week after the surgical procedure; (2) MCT site, 2 weeks after the first virus treatment; (3) MCT site, 5 weeks after the first virus treatment.
Figure 2Oncolytic Sendai virus MCT treatments results (Cases 3 and 4). Case 3. Male dog of mixed breed of 10 years old was presented with subcutaneous, distant (stage 4) poorly differentiated MCT located on abdomen with multiple palpable metastases. A debulking surgery has been performed. (1) Primary tumor before surgery (120 mm in diameter); (2) MCT secondary growth along the surgical scar, 4 days after the surgery; (3) MCT site, 1 week after the first viral treatment; (4) MCT site, 4 weeks after the first virus treatment. Case 4. Female dog of mixed breed of 8.5 years old was presented with cutaneous, local (stage 1) intermediately differentiated MCT. (1) Primary tumor (35 mm in diameter) before any treatment; (2) MCT site after complete surgical removal with at least 5 mm clean margins; (3) MCT relapse, 6 weeks after the surgery; (4) MCT site, 1 week after the first viral treatment; (5) MCT site, 2 weeks after the first virus treatment.
Figure 3Oncolytic Sendai virus MCT treatments results (Cases 5 and 6). Case 5. Female dog of mixed breed of 13 years old was presented with cutaneous intermediately differentiated inter-digital mass of 15 mm. The disease stage was not assigned. (1) Inter-digital MCT, 1 week after prednisone injection and before a surgery; (2) MCT site after debulking surgery and 1 month after final virus treatment. Case 6. Male golden retriever of 3 years old was presented with cutaneous well differentiated MCT (20 mm in diameter) in the abdominal region. The disease stage was not assigned. (1) MCT (mildly inflamed with ulceration at its center) before the viral treatment; (2) MCT site 2 weeks after the first viral treatment; (3) MCT site 6 weeks after the first viral treatment.