Safety and efficacy of a xenogeneic DNA vaccine encoding for human tyrosinase as adjunctive treatment for oral malignant melanoma in dogs following surgical excision of the primary tumor Journal Article


Authors: Grosenbaugh, D. A.; Leard, A. T.; Bergman, P. J.; Klein, M. K.; Meleo, K.; Susaneck, S.; Hess, P. R.; Jankowski, M. K.; Jones, P. D.; Leibman, N. F.; Johnson, M. H.; Kurzman, I. D.; Wolchok, J. D.
Article Title: Safety and efficacy of a xenogeneic DNA vaccine encoding for human tyrosinase as adjunctive treatment for oral malignant melanoma in dogs following surgical excision of the primary tumor
Abstract: Objective-To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a vaccine containing plasmid DNA with an insert encoding human tyrosinase (ie, huTyr vaccine) as adjunctive treatment for oral malignant melanoma (MM) in dogs. Animals-111 dogs (58 prospectively enrolled in a multicenter clinical trial and 53 historical controls) with stage II or III oral MM (modified World Health Organization staging scale, I to IV) in which locoregional disease control was achieved. Procedures-58 dogs received an initial series of 4 injections of huTyr vaccine (102 μg of DNA/injection) administered transdermally by use of a needle-free IM vaccination device. Dogs were monitored for adverse reactions. Surviving dogs received booster injections at 6-month intervals thereafter. Survival time for vaccinates was compared with that of historical control dogs via Kaplan-Meier survival analysis for the outcome of death. Results-Kaplan-Meier analysis of survival time until death attributable to MM was determined to be significantly improved for dogs that received the huTyr vaccine, compared with that of historical controls. However, median survival time could not be determined for vaccinates because < 50% died of MM before the end of the observation period. No systemic reactions requiring veterinary intervention were associated with vaccination. Local reactions were primarily limited to acute wheal or hematoma formation, mild signs of pain at the injection site, and postvaccination bruising. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance-Results support the safety and efficacy of the huTyr DNA vaccine in dogs as adjunctive treatment for oral MM. Impact for Human Medicine-Response to DNA vaccination in dogs with oral MM may be useful in development of plasmid DNA vaccination protocols for human patients with similar disease.
Keywords: cancer survival; controlled study; treatment outcome; treatment response; cancer surgery; unclassified drug; clinical trial; mortality; drug efficacy; drug safety; nonhuman; united states; cancer adjuvant therapy; outcome assessment; follow up; follow-up studies; neoplasm staging; prospective study; prospective studies; animals; melanoma; pain; cancer vaccines; dog diseases; dogs; multicenter study; plasmids; dna vaccine; monophenol monooxygenase; hematoma; mouth neoplasms; vaccines, dna; mouth cancer; dna, complementary; administration, cutaneous; kaplan-meier estimate; swelling; oral surgical procedures; skin bruising; hutyr vaccine; animal lameness; oral malignant melanoma
Journal Title: American Journal of Veterinary Research
Volume: 72
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0002-9645
Publisher: Amer Veterinary Medical Assoc  
Date Published: 2011-12-01
Start Page: 1631
End Page: 1638
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22126691
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 3 January 2012" - "CODEN: AJVRA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Jedd D Wolchok
    905 Wolchok