Literature DB >> 11727526

Surrogate markers of response to cancer immunotherapy.

M A Morse, T M Clay, A C Hobeika, P J Mosca, H K Lyerly.   

Abstract

Clinically effective cancer immunotherapy has been sought for more than 100 years and has been recently applied most successfully in strategies that passively deliver immune effectors such as monoclonal antibodies (anti-CD20 for lymphoma and anti-HER2/neu for breast cancer), donor lymphocyte infusions in chronic myelongenous leukemia and non-myeloablative allogeneic peripheral blood progenitor transplants for renal cell carcinoma. There is mounting enthusiasm for strategies employing active stimulation of antitumour immune responses. These include vaccines based on tumour antigen proteins and peptides, autologous, allogeneic or gene-modified tumour cells, dendritic cells and antigen-encoding viral vector constructs. Indeed, randomised Phase III clinical trials of autologous tumour cell vaccines for colorectal cancer demonstrated an improvement in disease free survival and a trend toward improved overall survival [1]. Despite these preliminary successes, it is clear that the many strategies under development cannot all be evaluated for survival benefit in large clinical trials that require many years, patients and resources to complete. This highlights the need to develop intermediate markers to help prioritise which agents to test in prospective randomised Phase III trials.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11727526     DOI: 10.1517/14712598.1.2.153

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Expert Opin Biol Ther        ISSN: 1471-2598            Impact factor:   4.388


  2 in total

1.  Direct measurement of peptide-specific CD8+ T cells using HLA-A2:Ig dimer for monitoring the in vivo immune response to a HER2/neu vaccine in breast and prostate cancer patients.

Authors:  Michael M Woll; Christine M Fisher; Gayle B Ryan; Jennifer M Gurney; Catherine E Storrer; Constantin G Ioannides; Craig D Shriver; Judd W Moul; David G McLeod; Sathibalan Ponniah; George E Peoples
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2004-07       Impact factor: 8.317

2.  Results and harmonization guidelines from two large-scale international Elispot proficiency panels conducted by the Cancer Vaccine Consortium (CVC/SVI).

Authors:  Sylvia Janetzki; Katherine S Panageas; Leah Ben-Porat; Jean Boyer; Cedrik M Britten; Timothy M Clay; Michael Kalos; Holden T Maecker; Pedro Romero; Jianda Yuan; W Martin Kast; Axel Hoos
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2007-08-25       Impact factor: 6.968

  2 in total

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