Abstract

Angiosarcoma is a deadly neoplasm of the vascular endothelium. Metastatic disease is often present at diagnosis, and 5-year survival is only 10–35%. Although there exist no immunocompetent mouse models of angiosarcoma with which to study immune-based approaches to therapy, angiosarcoma is a major killer of companion dogs, responsible for up to 2% of all canine deaths in some susceptible breeds or an estimated 120,000 per year in the US. The canine disease (HSA) often presents in the spleen as acute hemoabdomen secondary to splenic rupture. Even if life-saving splenectomy is performed, median overall survival (OS) is only 48 days, and 1-year survival is negligible. Here we report the analysis of a pilot phase I open-label trial of chemo-immunotherapy performed on consecutively presenting splenectomized canines with histologically verified HSA. Subjects received an abbreviated course of low-dose doxorubicin plus alpha interferon and an autologous dendritic cell-therapy reported to enhance durable CD8+ memory. Disease was monitored monthly by abdominal ultrasound, chest X-ray, and echocardiogram. Median OS in the per protocol population was 109 days including one of five animals that died cancer-free at 16 months after documented resolution of relapsed disease. These results indicate that therapeutic administration of chemo-immunotherapy is both feasible and safe, substantiating the rationale for additional veterinary and human clinical studies.

Highlights

  • All companion canines enrolled in the study were bona fide clinical subjects that presented in study-affiliated veterinary clinics with histopathologically verifiable hemangiosarcoma

  • Between February 2016 and April 2017, consecutively presenting domestic canines with a histopathologically confirmed diagnosis of hemangiosarcoma and the owners of which could provide written, informed consent were recruited for a phase I open-label pilot study to determine feasibility, safety, and efficacy of a chemo-immunotherapeutic treatment regimen

  • Two animals died before treatment could be administered, and one animal was withdrawn from the study by its owners after administration of a single vaccination and without receiving any chemotherapy

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of the study was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of chemo-immunotherapy while simultaneously validating the feasibility of spontaneous veterinary cancers in the dog for use as a model therapeutic system [25]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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