Abstract

Abstract The poor median survival for patients with glioblastoma (GBM) of 15 months has not budged for the past 15 years, when the current standard treatment was first approved. There is no standard of care chemotherapy for recurrent GBM. We previously showed that Zika virus (ZIKV) tropism for GBM cells is mediated through the receptor tyrosine kinase, AXL. This infection is cytotoxic. In this study we show that ZIKV is an effective oncolytic virus in a patient derived xenograft model. Fox N1 Nude homozygous female mice 6-8-weeks-old were grouped into 4 experimental arms: two patient derived cell lines, each with a ZIKV treated and a control group. There were 12 mice in each arm. Animals received subcutaneous flank injections of GBM 8049 or its AXL CRISPR knockout 8049 AXLKO (2x106 cells). When tumors reached 200 mm3, mice received intra-tumoral injection of 2.5x106 ZIKV particles or saline. ZIKV induced complete tumor remission in 22 of 24 animals (8049: 11/12; 8049 AXLKO: 11/12). There was no tumor remission in the saline treated animals. Median survival of 8049 and 8049 AXLKO ZIKV treated mice was 124 days and 125 days, respectively. This is compared to median survival of control animals 8049: 42 days; 8049 AXLKO: 46 days (P= 0.001). Among ZIKV treated mice, there were two recurrences: one in the 8049 tumor (24 days after significant tumor remission) and one 8049 AXLKO tumor (7 days after significant tumor remission). We conclude that ZIKV should be considered a candidate oncolytic virus for GBM.

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