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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Complete elimination of established neuroblastoma by synergistic action of gamma-irradiation and DCs treated with rSeV expressing interferon-beta gene.

Journal:
Gene therapy
Year:
2009
Authors:
Tatsuta, K et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatric Surgery · Japan
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy has been investigated as a new therapeutic approach to intractable neuroblastomas; however, only limited clinical effect has been reported. To overcome the relatively low sensitivity of neuroblastomas against immunotherapy, we undertook a preclinical efficacy study to examine murine models to assess the combined effects of gamma-irradiation pretreatment and recombinant Sendai virus (ts-rSeV/dF)-mediated murine interferon-beta (mIFN-beta) gene transfer to DCs using established c1300 neuroblastomas. Similar to intractable neuroblastomas in the clinic, established c1300 tumors were highly resistant to monotherapy with either gamma-irradiation or DCs activated by ts-rSeV/dF without transgene (ts-rSeV/dF-null) that has been shown to be effective against other murine tumors, including B16F10 melanoma. In contrast, immunotherapy using DCs expressing mIFN-beta through ts-rSeV/dF (ts-rSeV/dF-mIFNbeta-DCs) effectively reduced tumor size, and its combination with gamma-irradiation pretreatment dramatically enhanced its antitumor effect, resulting frequently in the complete elimination of established c1300 tumors 7-9 mm in diameter, in a high survival rate among mice, and in the development of protective immunity in the mice against rechallenge by the tumor cells. These results indicate that the combination of ts-rSeV/dF-mIFNbeta-DCs with gamma-irradiation is a hopeful strategy for the treatment of intractable neuroblastomas, warranting further investigation in the clinical setting.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18987675/