Oncolytic viral therapy engenders a clinical response in a recurrent ovarian cancer patient

John Micha & Bram Goldstein et al.

Platinum-resistant ovarian cancer frequently develops in response to multiple lines of chemotherapy, whereupon the disease becomes relatively intractable and clinical recourse is limited. We document a 58-year-old, advanced-stage, platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patient who previously failed numerous cytotoxic and targeted therapy regimens. She was referred to our gynecologic oncology service with a California (CA)-125 of 3194 U/mL and underwent a modified vaccinia virus coinciding with an Institutional Review Board-approved clinical trial. Following the oncolytic therapy and cycle 8 chemotherapy, the patient’s CA-125 declined to 440 U/mL; a computerized tomography scan of the abdomen and pelvis revealed a partial response to therapy. The favorable clinical benefit encountered in our case study indicates that the combination of oncolytic viral therapy and chemotherapy should be considered as a therapeutic option for heavily pretreated ovarian patients.

Authors
John Micha, Mark Rettenmaier, Peter Giuliano, Randy Bohart, Bram Goldstein