2020
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224775
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Blood and tissue biomarker analysis in dogs with osteosarcoma treated with palliative radiation and intra-tumoral autologous natural killer cell transfer

Abstract: We have previously reported radiation-induced sensitization of canine osteosarcoma (OSA) to natural killer (NK) therapy, including results from a first-in-dog clinical trial. Here, we report correlative analyses of blood and tissue specimens for signals of immune activation in trial subjects. Among 10 dogs treated with palliative radiotherapy (RT) and intra-tumoral adoptive NK transfer, we performed ELISA on serum cytokines, flow cytometry for immune phenotype of PBMCs, and PCR on tumor tissue for immune-relat… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Similar to human NK cells, canine NK cells can be grown with irradiated feeder cell lines, such as genetically modified K562 cells or with cytokines including IL-2/12/15/18/21. Canine NK cells demonstrated cytotoxicity in vitro and show increased expression of Granzyme B [ 124 ].…”
Section: Canine Models Of Nk Adoptive Immunotherapy For Pediatric Solid Tumorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Similar to human NK cells, canine NK cells can be grown with irradiated feeder cell lines, such as genetically modified K562 cells or with cytokines including IL-2/12/15/18/21. Canine NK cells demonstrated cytotoxicity in vitro and show increased expression of Granzyme B [ 124 ].…”
Section: Canine Models Of Nk Adoptive Immunotherapy For Pediatric Solid Tumorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Four dogs were euthanized related to progressive osteosarcoma and two died of unrelated causes. Four dogs (40%) remained alive at 18 months [ 123 , 124 ]. This demonstrates the feasibility of NK cell immunotherapy as a viable treatment option for canine osteosarcoma patients and adds to the evidence that NK cell therapy is a new treatment option for pediatric/AYA osteosarcoma patients.…”
Section: Canine Models Of Nk Adoptive Immunotherapy For Pediatric Solid Tumorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…One of the major strengths of clinical trials in dogs with spontaneously occurring cancers is the ability to do intensive longitudinal patient biospecimen sampling and clinical assessments, often more intensively than is possible in a comparable clinical trial in human patients. This is well-illustrated in the afore described first-in-dog clinical trial, where pre- and post-treatment serum cytokine concentrations were assessed by ELISA, tumor gene expression profiles by qRT-PCR, circulating immune cell phenotypes by flow cytometry, and intra-tumoral immune cell phenotypes by immunohistochemistry and qRT-PCR ( 59 ). Gradually increasing availability of new canine-specific reagents and application of new technologies to the dog, will further increase the number and power of the correlative studies that can be done and their translational relevance.…”
Section: Clinical Application Of Adoptive Nk Cell Immunotherapy In Canine Osteosarcomamentioning
confidence: 98%
“…After a pre‐conditioning regimen of four weekly radiation doses, they injected two doses of 7.5 × 10 6 NK cells/kg with 2500,000 IU/kg rhIL‐2 in 10 dogs 1 week apart. Follow up showed five patients that survived 6 months, including one dog that lived 17.9 months 40 . Of the 10 dogs, one dog obtained a grade 3 toxicity with symptoms consistent with IL‐2 toxicity.…”
Section: Natural Killer Cellsmentioning
confidence: 99%