Literature DB >> 11956266

Adjuvant immunotherapy of resected, intermediate-thickness, node-negative melanoma with an allogeneic tumor vaccine: overall results of a randomized trial of the Southwest Oncology Group.

Vernon K Sondak1, P-Y Liu, Ralph J Tuthill, Raymond A Kempf, Joseph M Unger, Jeffrey A Sosman, John A Thompson, Geoffrey R Weiss, Bruce G Redman, James G Jakowatz, R Dirk Noyes, Lawrence E Flaherty.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Patients with clinically negative nodes constitute over 85% of new melanoma cases. There is no adjuvant therapy for intermediate-thickness, node-negative melanoma patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The Southwest Oncology Group conducted a randomized phase III trial of an allogeneic melanoma vaccine for 2 years versus observation in patients with intermediate-thickness (1.5 to 4.0 mm or Clark's level IV if thickness unknown), clinically or pathologically node-negative melanoma (T3N0M0).
RESULTS: Six hundred eighty-nine patients were accrued over 4.5 years; 89 patients (13%) were ineligible. Surgical node staging was performed in 24%, the remainder were clinical N0. Thirteen eligible patients refused assigned treatment: seven on the observation arm and six on the vaccine arm. Most vaccine patients experienced mild to moderate local toxicity, but 26 (9%) experienced grade 3 toxicity. After a median follow-up of 5.6 years, there were 107 events (tumor recurrences or deaths) among the 300 eligible patients randomized to vaccine compared with 114 among the 300 eligible patients randomized to observation (hazard ratio, 0.92; Cox-adjusted P(2) = 0.51). There was no difference in vaccine efficacy among patients with tumors < or = 3 mm or > 3 mm.
CONCLUSION: This represents one of the largest randomized, controlled trials of adjuvant vaccine therapy in human cancer reported to date. Compliance with randomization was excellent, with only 2% refusing assigned therapy. There is no evidence of improved disease-free survival among patients randomized to receive vaccine, although the power to detect a small but clinically significant difference was low. Future investigations of adjuvant vaccine approaches for patients with intermediate-thickness melanoma should involve larger numbers of patients and ideally should include sentinel node biopsy staging.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11956266     DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2002.08.071

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Oncol        ISSN: 0732-183X            Impact factor:   44.544


  33 in total

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7.  Adjuvant vaccine immunotherapy of resected, clinically node-negative melanoma: long-term outcome and impact of HLA class I antigen expression on overall survival.

Authors:  William E Carson; Joseph M Unger; Jeffrey A Sosman; Lawrence E Flaherty; Ralph J Tuthill; Mark J Porter; John A Thompson; Raymond A Kempf; Megan Othus; Antoni Ribas; Vernon K Sondak
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Review 9.  Vaccines, Adjuvants, and Dendritic Cell Activators--Current Status and Future Challenges.

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Review 10.  Utility of adjuvant systemic therapy in melanoma.

Authors:  A M M Eggermont; A Testori; J Marsden; P Hersey; I Quirt; T Petrella; H Gogas; R M MacKie; A Hauschild
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