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Oncolytic Measles Virus Expressing the Sodium Iodide Symporter to Treat Drug-Resistant Ovarian Cancer

Authors :
Ann L. Oberg
Kimberly R. Kalli
Pamela J. Atherton
Ileana Aderca
Gary L. Keeney
Keith L. Knutson
Evanthia Galanis
Kah-Whye Peng
William A. Cliby
Jamie N. Bakkum-Gamez
Matthew S. Block
Matthew J. Maurer
Lynn C. Hartmann
Mark J. Federspiel
Harry J. Long
Paul Haluska
Stephen J. Russell
Sean C. Dowdy
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Edmonston vaccine strains of measles virus (MV) have significant antitumor activity in mouse xenograft models of ovarian cancer. MV engineered to express the sodium iodide symporter gene (MV-NIS) facilitates localization of viral gene expression and offers a tool for tumor radiovirotherapy. Here, we report results from a clinical evaluation of MV-NIS in patients with taxol- and platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. MV-NIS was given intraperitoneally every 4 weeks for up to 6 cycles. Treatment was well tolerated and associated with promising median overall survival in these patients with heavily pretreated ovarian cancer; no dose-limiting toxicity was observed in 16 patients treated at high-dose levels (108–109 TCID50), and their median overall survival of 26.5 months compared favorably with other contemporary series. MV receptor CD46 and nectin-4 expression was confirmed by immunohistochemistry in patient tumors. Sodium iodide symporter expression in patient tumors after treatment was confirmed in three patients by 123I uptake on SPECT/CTs and was associated with long progression-free survival. Immune monitoring posttreatment showed an increase in effector T cells recognizing the tumor antigens IGFBP2 and FRα, indicating that MV-NIS treatment triggered cellular immunity against the patients' tumor and suggesting that an immune mechanism mediating the observed antitumor effect. Our findings support further clinical evaluation of MV-NIS as an effective immunovirotherapy. Cancer Res; 75(1); 22–30. ©2014 AACR.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a00b289c88faa47f1a0e479e91a7a075