Abstract

Canine splenic hemangiosarcomas (HSA) are malignant mesenchymal tumors with a high tendency for metastasis. Median survival times after splenectomy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy usually range between 5 and 8 months. The aim of this prospective randomized double-blinded study was to examine the efficacy of a commercially available dendritic cell therapy (PetBioCell) following splenectomy. In addition, possible side effects of this therapy were evaluated. Twenty-one dogs with histologically confirmed splenic HSA without metastasis (stages I or II) were included in the study. Ten dogs received the dendritic cell therapy, and 11 dogs received a placebo. Injections were administered according to the manufacturer's instructions monthly for the first 3 months and then every 3 months until death. Survival times and toxicoses of both groups were compared. Follow-up data were available for all 21 patients; the observation period ranging until euthanasia or metastasis-related death. One patient that had received the dendritic cell therapy was euthanized due to prostatitis and experienced the longest survival time (668 days). One dog in the placebo-group lived for 448 days after splenectomy. The median survival times in the dendritic cell therapy and the placebo group amounted to 74 and 126 days, respectively. There was no significant difference in tumor-free interval (t(18) = 1.4, p = 0.911) and survival times (t(19) = -0.094, p = 0.463) between the 2 groups. Toxicoses reported in both groups were mild and self-limiting. Immunotherapy using autologous, immature and unprimed dendritic cells according to the PetBioCell method failed to show efficacy on tumor-free interval and survival time in the presented dog population with splenic hemangiosarcoma.

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