Great News in the fight on Osteocarcoma

Great News on the Canine Cancer Front

In honor of November’s National Pet Cancer Awareness Month I would like to
share some “hot off the press” wonderfully optimistic news with you. Dr.
Nicola Mason from the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary
Medicine has been researching a new way to treat osteosarcoma, an aggressive
and fatal form of bone cancer that has an affinity for growing within the leg
bones of large and giant- breed dogs.

Until now, treatment of osteosarcoma has consisted primarily of amputation
(removal) of the affected leg with or without chemotherapy. In spite of such
aggressive treatment, inevitably tiny clusters of cancer cells eventually
grow into metastatic tumors that ultimately become life-ending. Approximately
60% of dogs die within one year of the diagnosis.

A new approach

Dr. Mason’s innovative approach to treating dogs with osteosarcoma involves
“cancer immunotherapy” in which the patient’s own immune system is triggered
to target and kill tumor cells. In order to use a dog’s immune system to
treat osteosarcoma Dr. Mason devised a vaccine consisting of bacteria that
have been modified to express a protein called Her2/neu. This protein is
known as a “growth factor receptor” and is found on a variety of different
cancer cells, including some canine osteosarcoma cells. You may have heard of
Her2/neu before because it is commonly associated with breast cancer cells in
women. The concept behind the vaccine is as follows: The bacteria stimulates
the dog’s “immune system soldiers” to seek out and destroy the bacteria along
with cells that express Her2/neu (osteosarcoma cells).

Outcomes to date

Thus far, Dr. Mason has treated 12 dogs with osteosarcoma following
amputation and chemotherapy. The dogs received the vaccine once weekly for
three weeks. Side effects of the vaccine were minimal. All that was observed
was a mild, brief fever following vaccine administration.

The preliminary results have been immensely encouraging. The first vaccinated
dog, Sasha has a survival time of 570 days thus far. Two other dogs
vaccinated at the beginning of the study are alive and cancer free more than
500 days post diagnosis. Other dogs who were vaccinated more recently are
still doing well. These are truly fantastic results.

What comes next?

Some dogs with osteosarcoma are not good candidates for amputation primarily
because of neurological or musculoskeletal issues in their other limbs.
Treatment options for these dogs are aimed at reducing the pain associated
with the tumor. Dr. Mason plans to begin including some of these nonsurgical
candidates in her osteosarcoma vaccine study.

Additionally, Dr. Mason is contemplating learning if what she has developed
would be an effective means for prevention of osteosarcoma. Certain breeds
(Rottweilers, Irish Wolfhounds, Great Danes, Saint Bernards, Doberman
Pinschers, and Greyhounds, to name a few) are particularly predisposed to
osteosarcoma. It will be fascinating to learn if the osteosarcoma vaccine
will effectively prevent this horrific disease in high-risk individuals.

The research results gathered thus far represent a monumental success in
cancer treatment and provide significant hope for a disease previously
associated with a grim prognosis. Kudos to Dr. Mason for her stunning work!
If your dog has osteosarcoma and you are interested in participating in Dr.
Mason’s studies, contact her at 215-898-3996 or by e-mail at
nmason@vet.upenn.edu.

Best wishes,

Nancy Kay, DVM

Diplomate, American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Author of Speaking for Spot: Be the Advocate Your Dog Needs to Live a Happy,
Healthy, Longer Life
Author of Your Dog’s Best Health: A Dozen Reasonable Things to Expect From
Your Vet
Respond to this topic here on forum.oes.org  
Thanks for posting Cindy!

This is very promising.
GREAT news, Cindy..thanks for posting!
having list several dogs to this horrible disease, this looks wonderful!!!
Thank you for sharing this news!! Any progress against cancer is a reason to cheer :cheer:
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