Colorectal cancers are significant causes of morbidity and mortality and existing therapies often perform poorly for individuals afflicted with advanced disease. Oncolytic virotherapy is an emerging therapeutic modality with great promise for addressing this medical need. Herein we describe the in vivo testing of recombinant variants of the tanapoxvirus (TPV). Recombinant viruses were made ablated for either the 66R gene (encoding a thymidine kinase), the 2L gene (encoding a TNF-binding protein), or both. Some of the recombinants were armed to express mouse chemotactic protein 1 (mCCL2/mMCP-1), mouse granulocyte-monocyte colony stimulating factor (mGM-CSF), or bacterial flagellin (FliC). Tumors were induced in athymic nude mice by implantation of HCT 116 cells and subsequently treated by a single intratumoral injection of one of the recombinant TPVs. Histological examination showed a common neoplastic cell type and a range of immune cell infiltration, necrosis, and tumor cell organization. Significant regression was seen in tumors treated with virus TPV/Δ2L/Δ66R/fliC, and to a lesser extent the recombinants TPV/Δ2L and TPV/Δ66R. Our results suggest that oncolytic recombinants of the TPV armed with activators of the innate immune response may be effective virotherapeutic agents for colorectal cancers in humans and should be explored further to fully realize their potential.
A 40-year-old man developed granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) following a mild case of COVID-19. Initially, he experienced mild migrating joint pain for 2 months prior to testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 but dramatically worsened following resolution of his infection. The pain continued to progress until he suddenly develope haemoptysis, prompting him to present to a local hospital. The diagnosis of diffuse alveolar haemorrhage secondary to GPA was confirmed with labs, imaging and histopathology. Precipitous deterioration of GPA with concurrent COVID-19 infection indicates a possible temporal relationship. Since the onset of the pandemic, SARS-CoV-2 has been anecdotally associated with the development of various connective tissue disorders. The overlapping clinical presentations and similar appearance on lung imaging present clinicians with a diagnostic challenge. This underscores the importance of having a high index of suspicion of autoimmune diagnoses in patients who present with new or worsening findings following a COVID-19 infection.
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