Interferon-β gene therapy inhibits tumor formation and causes regression of established tumors in immune-deficient mice

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Abstract

Despite the potential of type 1 interferons (IFNs) for the treatment of cancer, clinical experience with IFN protein therapy of solid tumors has been disappointing. IFN-β has potent antiproliferative activity against most human tumor cells in vitro in addition to its known immunomodulatory activities. The antiproliferative effect, however, relies on IFN-β concentrations that cannot be achieved by parenteral protein administration because of rapid protein clearance and systemic toxicities. We demonstrate here that ex vivo IFN-β gene transduction by a replication-defective adenovirus in as few as 1% of implanted cells blocked tumor formation. Direct in vivo IFN-β gene delivery into established tumors generated high local concentrations of IFN-β, inhibited tumor growth, and in many cases caused complete tumor regression. Because the mice were immune-deficient, it is likely that the anti-tumor effect was primarily through direct inhibition of tumor cell proliferation and survival. Based on these studies, we argue that local IFN-β gene therapy with replication-defective adenoviral vectors might be an effective treatment for some solid tumors.

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Qin, X. Q., Tao, N., Dergay, A., Moy, P., Fawell, S., Davis, A., … Barsoum, J. (1998). Interferon-β gene therapy inhibits tumor formation and causes regression of established tumors in immune-deficient mice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 95(24), 14411–14416. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.24.14411

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