Abstract

Despite all good intentions, dogs are still running behind humans in effective cancer immunotherapies. The more effective treatments in humans, like infusions of CAR-T and NK-cells are not broadly pursued for canines due to significant costs, the rather complicated logistics and the lack of targetable surface antigens. Monoclonal antibodies are challenging to develop considering the limited knowledge about canine target antigens and about their mode of action. Although immunogenic vaccines could be less costly, this approach is hampered by the fact that cancer by itself is immuno-suppressive and any preceding chemotherapy may suppress any clinically meaningful immune response. This review – rather than providing a comprehensive listing of all available immunotherapies for dogs, aims at pointing out the issues that are holding back this field but which hopefully can be addressed so that dogs can “catch up” with what is available to humans.

Highlights

  • Back in 2017, I published a review on the immunotherapy options for dogs with cancer

  • Any immunotherapy that profit-minded companies would be interested in commercializing for the canine market would have to be offered at a prize that dog owners feel comfortable paying

  • As expected for mRNA transfection, the duration of CAR expression was short. It is known from human CAR-T cell studies that the T-cells have to clonally expand and persist in the recipient to show efficacy [8]

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Summary

Frontiers in Immunology

Dogs are still running behind humans in effective cancer immunotherapies. The more effective treatments in humans, like infusions of CAR-T and NK-cells are not broadly pursued for canines due to significant costs, the rather complicated logistics and the lack of targetable surface antigens. Monoclonal antibodies are challenging to develop considering the limited knowledge about canine target antigens and about their mode of action. Immunogenic vaccines could be less costly, this approach is hampered by the fact that cancer by itself is immunosuppressive and any preceding chemotherapy may suppress any clinically meaningful immune response. This review – rather than providing a comprehensive listing of all available immunotherapies for dogs, aims at pointing out the issues that are holding back this field but which hopefully can be addressed so that dogs can “catch up” with what is available to humans

INTRODUCTION
Immunotherapy for Dogs
MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES
TUMOR VACCINES AND ONCOLYTIC VIRUSES
IMMUNOLOGICAL MODULATION OF THE TUMOR MICROENVIRONMENT
Findings
WHAT NEXT?
Full Text
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