Clinical development of reovirus for cancer therapy: An oncolytic virus with immune-mediated antitumor activity

World J Methodol. 2016 Mar 26;6(1):25-42. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v6.i1.25.

Abstract

Reovirus is a double-stranded RNA virus with demonstrated oncolysis or preferential replication in cancer cells. The oncolytic properties of reovirus appear to be dependent, in part, on activated Ras signaling. In addition, Ras-transformation promotes reovirus oncolysis by affecting several steps of the viral life cycle. Reovirus-mediated immune responses can present barriers to tumor targeting, serve protective functions against reovirus systemic toxicity, and contribute to therapeutic efficacy through antitumor immune-mediated effects via innate and adaptive responses. Preclinical studies have demonstrated the broad anticancer activity of wild-type, unmodified type 3 Dearing strain reovirus (Reolysin(®)) across a spectrum of malignancies. The development of reovirus as an anticancer agent and available clinical data reported from 22 clinical trials will be reviewed.

Keywords: Clinical trial; Epidermal growth factor receptor; Immune modulation; Oncolytic virus; Preclinical; Ras; Reovirus; Type 3 Dearing.

Publication types

  • Review