Oncolytic vaccinia virotherapy of anaplastic thyroid cancer in vivo. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • CONTEXT: Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is a fatal disease with a median survival of only 6 months. Novel therapies are needed to improve dismal outcomes. OBJECTIVE: A mutated, replication-competent, vaccinia virus (GLV-1h68) has oncolytic effects on human ATC cell lines in vitro. We assessed the utility of GLV-1h68 in treating anaplastic thyroid cancer in vivo. DESIGN: Athymic nude mice with xenograft flank tumors of human ATCs (8505C and DRO90-1) were treated with a single intratumoral injection of GLV-1h68 at low dose (5x10(5) plaque-forming unit), high dose (5x10(6) plaque-forming unit), or PBS. Virus-mediated marker gene expression (luciferase, green fluorescent protein, and beta-galactosidase), viral biodistribution, and flank tumor volumes were measured. RESULTS: Luciferase expression was detected 2 d after injection. Continuous viral replication within tumors was reflected by increasing luciferase activity to d 9. At d 10, tumor viral recovery was increased more than 50-fold as compared with the injected dose, and minimal virus was recovered from the lung, liver, brain, heart, spleen, and kidneys. High-dose virus directly injected into normal tissues was undetectable at d 10. The mean volume of control 8505C tumors increased 50.8-fold by d 45, in contrast to 10.5-fold (low dose) and 2.1-fold (high dose; P=0.028) increases for treated tumors. DRO90-1 tumors also showed significant growth inhibition by high-dose virus. No virus-related toxicity was observed throughout the study. CONCLUSIONS: GLV-1h68 efficiently infects, expresses transgenes within, and inhibits the growth of ATC in vivo. These promising findings support future clinical trials for patients with ATC.

publication date

  • August 12, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Cancer Vaccines
  • Carcinoma
  • Thyroid Neoplasms
  • Vaccinia virus
  • Viral Vaccines

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3728375

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 57349163328

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1210/jc.2008-0316

PubMed ID

  • 18697871

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 93

issue

  • 11