| Literature DB >> 30759787 |
Ramón M Almela1, Agustina Ansón2.
Abstract
In dogs, melanomas are relatively common tumors and the most common form of oral malignancy. Biological behavior is highly variable, usually aggressive, and frequently metastatic, with reported survival times of three months for oral or mucosal melanomas in advanced disease stages. Classical clinical management remains challenging; thus, novel and more efficacious treatment strategies are needed. Evidence-based medicine supports the role of the immune system to treat neoplastic diseases. Besides, immunotherapy offers the possibility of a precise medicinal approach to treat cancer. In recent years, multiple immunotherapeutic strategies have been developed, and are now recognized as a pillar of treatment. In addition, dogs represent a good model for translational medicine purposes. This review will cover the most relevant immunotherapeutic strategies for the treatment of canine malignant melanoma, divided among five different categories, namely, monoclonal antibodies, nonspecific immunotherapy activated by bacteria, vaccines, gene therapy, and lymphokine-activated killer cell therapy.Entities:
Keywords: canine; gene therapy; immunotherapy; malignant; melanoma; review; vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 30759787 PMCID: PMC6466282 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci6010015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
World Health Organization staging system for canine oral malignant melanoma.
| Stage I | Stage II | Stage III | Stage IV |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤2 cm diameter | 2–4 cm diameter | >4 cm diameter | Any size |
| No involvement of lymph nodes | No involvement of lymph nodes | +/− metastatic lymph nodes | Distant metastasis |
Figure 1Summary of the different strategies for immunotherapy in CMM.