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      Assessing the Completeness of Reporting in Preclinical Oncolytic Virus Therapy Studies

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          Abstract

          Irreproducibility of preclinical findings could be a significant barrier to the “bench-to-bedside” development of oncolytic viruses (OVs). A contributing factor is the incomplete and non-transparent reporting of study methodology and design. Using the NIH Principles and Guidelines for Reporting Preclinical Research, a core set of seven recommendations, we evaluated the completeness of reporting of preclinical OV studies. We also developed an evidence map identifying the current trends in OV research. A systematic search of MEDLINE and Embase identified all relevant articles published over an 18 month period. We screened 1,554 articles, and 236 met our a priori-defined inclusion criteria. Adenovirus (43%) was the most commonly used viral platform. Frequently investigated cancers included colorectal (14%), skin (12%), and breast (11%). Xenograft implantation (61%) in mice (96%) was the most common animal model. The use of preclinical reporting guidelines was listed in 0.4% of articles. Biological and technical replicates were completely reported in 1% of studies, statistics in 49%, randomization in 1%, blinding in 2%, sample size estimation in 0%, and inclusion/exclusion criteria in 0%. Overall, completeness of reporting in the preclinical OV therapy literature is poor. This may hinder efforts to interpret, replicate, and ultimately translate promising preclinical OV findings.

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          Most cited references22

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          Cancer immunotherapy: moving beyond current vaccines.

          Great progress has been made in the field of tumor immunology in the past decade, but optimism about the clinical application of currently available cancer vaccine approaches is based more on surrogate endpoints than on clinical tumor regression. In our cancer vaccine trials of 440 patients, the objective response rate was low (2.6%), and comparable to the results obtained by others. We consider here results in cancer vaccine trials and highlight alternate strategies that mediate cancer regression in preclinical and clinical models.
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            ONCOLYTIC VIROTHERAPY

            Oncolytic virotherapy is an emerging treatment modality which uses replication competent viruses to destroy cancers. Advances in the past two years include preclinical proof of feasibility for a single-shot virotherapy cure, identification of drugs that accelerate intratumoral virus propagation, new strategies to maximize the immunotherapeutic potential of oncolytic virotherapy, and clinical confirmation of a critical viremic thereshold for vascular delivery and intratumoral virus replication. The primary clinical milestone was completion of accrual in a phase III trial of intratumoral herpes simplex virus therapy using talimogene laherparepvec for metastatic melanoma. Challenges for the field are to select ‘winners’ from a burgeoning number of oncolytic platforms and engineered derivatives, to transiently suppress but then unleash the power of the immune system to maximize both virus spread and anticancer immunity, to develop more meaningful preclinical virotherapy models and to manufacture viruses with orders of magnitude higher yields compared to established vaccine manufacturing processes.
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              A call for transparent reporting to optimize the predictive value of preclinical research.

              The US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke convened major stakeholders in June 2012 to discuss how to improve the methodological reporting of animal studies in grant applications and publications. The main workshop recommendation is that at a minimum studies should report on sample-size estimation, whether and how animals were randomized, whether investigators were blind to the treatment, and the handling of data. We recognize that achieving a meaningful improvement in the quality of reporting will require a concerted effort by investigators, reviewers, funding agencies and journal editors. Requiring better reporting of animal studies will raise awareness of the importance of rigorous study design to accelerate scientific progress.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Mol Ther Oncolytics
                Mol Ther Oncolytics
                Molecular Therapy Oncolytics
                American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy
                2372-7705
                21 May 2019
                27 September 2019
                21 May 2019
                : 14
                : 179-187
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Clinical Epidemiology Program, BLUEPRINT Translational Research Group, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
                [2 ]Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M5, Canada
                [3 ]School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M5, Canada
                [4 ]Centre for Journalology, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
                [5 ]Department of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, UK
                [6 ]Cancer Therapeutics Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
                [7 ]Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M5, Canada
                [8 ]Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, Montreal, QC H3A 0G4, Canada
                [9 ]Regenerative Medicine Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
                [10 ]Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Ottawa, The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada
                [11 ]Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M5, Canada
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author: Manoj M. Lalu, MD, PhD, Clinical Epidemiology Program, BLUEPRINT Translational Research Group, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, 501 Smyth Road, P.O. Box 201B, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6, Canada. mlalu@ 123456toh.ca
                Article
                S2372-7705(19)30059-2
                10.1016/j.omto.2019.05.004
                6586991
                31276026
                96712623-99cd-4b88-b401-d0e845fe6652
                © 2019 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 25 January 2019
                : 9 May 2019
                Categories
                Article

                oncolytic virus,reporting guidelines,preclinical study design,reproducibility,methodological rigor,reporting standards,transparency,reporting quality,immunotherapy

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