WASHINGTON, DC -- August 29, 2011 -- Researchers from Yale
University are looking to
a virus from the same family as the rabies virus to fight a form of cancer
primarily found in children and young adults.
They report their findings in the September 2011 issue of the Journal of Virology.
Soft tissue sarcomas are cancers that develop in tissues
which connect, support, or surround other structures and organs of the body.
Muscles, tendons, fibrous tissues, fat, blood vessels, nerves,
and synovial tissues are types of soft tissue.
While relatively rare in adults, they represent approximately 15% of
pediatric malignancies and result in death for approximately one-third of
patients within 5 years of diagnosis.
Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is a rhabdovirus, which is
the same family of viruses as rabies, and causes a disease similar to foot and
mouth disease in cattle. Recent research
has discovered that this virus also is oncolytic, meaning it seeks out and
destroys cancerous tumors. Previous studies have already shown VSV to be
promising in treating brain tumors in mice.
In this study the researchers investigated the potential of
VSV and an oncolytically enhanced version of the virus (VSV-rp30a) to
effectively target and kill 13 different sarcomas. Both of the viruses efficiently infected and
killed 12 of the sarcomas. The
resistance of the one surviving sarcoma line was eventually overcome by
pretreatment with compounds that antagonize interferon signaling.
Additionally they looked at the ability of VSV-rp30a to
infect and arrest tumor growth in mice.
“A single intravenous injection of VSV-rp30a selectively
infected all subcutaneous human sarcomas tested in mice and arrested the growth
of tumors that otherwise grew 11-fold,” say the researchers. “Overall, we find
that the potential efficacy of VSV as an oncolytic agent extends to
nonhematologic mesodermal tumors and that unusually strong resistance to VSV
oncolysis can be overcome with interferon attenuators.”
(Paglino, J.C. and
van den Pol, A.N. 2011. Vesicular
stomatitis virus has extensive oncolytic activity against human sarcomas: Rare
resistance is overcome by blocking interferon pathways. Journal of Virology. 85:9346-9358.)