PURPOSE: The tumor-associated auto-antigen p53 is commonly overexpressed in various types of human cancer, including colorectal cancer. Experiments in preclinical models have shown that it can serve as a target for T-cell-mediated tumor-eradication. The feasibility of a p53-specific therapeutic vaccination was investigated in cancer patients. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: A Phase I/II dose-escalation study was performed that evaluated the effect of a recombinant canarypoxvirus (ALVAC) vaccine encoding wild-type human p53 in 15 patients with advanced colorectal cancer. Each group of five patients received three i.v. doses of one-tenth of a dose, one-third of a dose, or 1 dose of the vaccine [1 dose = 1 x 10(7.5) cell culture infectious dosis (CCID)50]. RESULTS: Potent T-cell and IgG antibody responses against the vector component of the ALVAC vaccine were induced in the majority of the patients. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent-spot assay (ELISPOT) analysis of vaccine-induced immunity revealed the presence of IFN-gamma-secreting T cells against both ALVAC and p53, whereas no significant interleukin-4 responses were detected. Vaccine-mediated enhancement of p53-specific T-cell immunity was found in two patients in the highest-vaccine-dose group. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated the feasibility, even in patients with advanced cancer, to elicit immune responses against the ubiquitously expressed tumor-associated auto-antigen p53. Our results form the basis for additional studies that will explore the antitumor capacity of p53 containing multivalent vaccines in cancer patients with limited tumor burden.
PURPOSE: The tumor-associated auto-antigen p53 is commonly overexpressed in various types of humancancer, including colorectal cancer. Experiments in preclinical models have shown that it can serve as a target for T-cell-mediated tumor-eradication. The feasibility of a p53-specific therapeutic vaccination was investigated in cancerpatients. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: A Phase I/II dose-escalation study was performed that evaluated the effect of a recombinant canarypoxvirus (ALVAC) vaccine encoding wild-type humanp53 in 15 patients with advanced colorectal cancer. Each group of five patients received three i.v. doses of one-tenth of a dose, one-third of a dose, or 1 dose of the vaccine [1 dose = 1 x 10(7.5) cell culture infectious dosis (CCID)50]. RESULTS: Potent T-cell and IgG antibody responses against the vector component of the ALVAC vaccine were induced in the majority of the patients. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent-spot assay (ELISPOT) analysis of vaccine-induced immunity revealed the presence of IFN-gamma-secreting T cells against both ALVAC and p53, whereas no significant interleukin-4 responses were detected. Vaccine-mediated enhancement of p53-specific T-cell immunity was found in two patients in the highest-vaccine-dose group. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated the feasibility, even in patients with advanced cancer, to elicit immune responses against the ubiquitously expressed tumor-associated auto-antigen p53. Our results form the basis for additional studies that will explore the antitumor capacity of p53 containing multivalent vaccines in cancerpatients with limited tumor burden.
Authors: Nicola R Hardwick; Paul Frankel; Christopher Ruel; Julie Kilpatrick; Weimin Tsai; Ferdynand Kos; Teodora Kaltcheva; Lucille Leong; Robert Morgan; Vincent Chung; Raechelle Tinsley; Melissa Eng; Sharon Wilczynski; Joshua D I Ellenhorn; Don J Diamond; Mihaela Cristea Journal: Clin Cancer Res Date: 2018-01-04 Impact factor: 12.531
Authors: Cyrille J Cohen; Zhili Zheng; Regina Bray; Yangbing Zhao; Linda A Sherman; Steven A Rosenberg; Richard A Morgan Journal: J Immunol Date: 2005-11-01 Impact factor: 5.422
Authors: Marc R Theoret; Cyrille J Cohen; Azam V Nahvi; Lien T Ngo; Kimberly B Suri; Daniel J Powell; Mark E Dudley; Richard A Morgan; Steven A Rosenberg Journal: Hum Gene Ther Date: 2008-11 Impact factor: 5.695
Authors: Anand G Menon; Rob A E M Tollenaar; Cornelis J H van de Velde; Hein Putter; Connie M Janssen-van Rhijn; Rob Keijzer; Gert Jan Fleuren; Peter J K Kuppen Journal: Clin Exp Metastasis Date: 2004 Impact factor: 5.150
Authors: Ban Qi Tay; Quentin Wright; Rahul Ladwa; Christopher Perry; Graham Leggatt; Fiona Simpson; James W Wells; Benedict J Panizza; Ian H Frazer; Jazmina L G Cruz Journal: Vaccines (Basel) Date: 2021-05-20