4.6 Article

Specificity, Safety, Efficacy of EGFRvIII-Retargeted Oncolytic HSV for Xenotransplanted Human Glioblastoma

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13091677

Keywords

oncolytic virotherapy; glioblastoma stem cells; glioblastoma initiating cells; EGFRvIII; oncolytic HSV

Categories

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [340060]
  2. Compagnia di San Paolo, Turin, Italy [2015.9834]
  3. Italian Ministry of Health
  4. RFO of the University of Bologna
  5. Fondazione CARISBO Ricerca Medica Traslazionale e clinica-Ricerca scientifica e tecnologica [2019.0554]

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R-613, an oncolytic HSV fully retargeted to EGFRvIII, showed promising efficacy in increasing the median survival time of mice with EGFRvIII-expressing human glioblastoma. However, its effectiveness as a late treatment for established glioblastomas was less significant. The susceptibility of uninfected tumor cells to R-613 infection suggests that multiple treatments could enhance its therapeutic efficacy.
Glioblastoma is a lethal primary brain tumor lacking effective therapy. The secluded onset site, combined with the infiltrative properties of this tumor, require novel targeted therapies. In this scenario, the use of oncolytic viruses retargeted to glioblastoma cells and able to spread across the tumor cells represent an intriguing treatment strategy. Here, we tested the specificity, safety and efficacy of R-613, the first oncolytic HSV fully retargeted to EGFRvIII, a variant of the epidermal growth factor receptor carrying a mutation typically found in glioblastoma. An early treatment with R-613 on orthotopically transplanted EGFRvIII-expressing human glioblastoma significantly increased the median survival time of mice. In this setting, the growth of human glioblastoma xenotransplants was monitored by a secreted luciferase reporter and showed that R-613 is able to substantially delay the development of the tumor masses. When administered as late treatment to a well-established glioblastomas, R-613 appeared to be less effective. Notably the uninfected tumor cells derived from the explanted tumor masses were still susceptible to R-613 infection ex vivo, thus suggesting that multiple treatments could enhance R-613 therapeutic efficacy, making R-613 a promising oncolytic HSV candidate for glioblastoma treatment.

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