Literature DB >> 12406877

Successful therapy of metastatic cancer using tumor vaccines in mixed allogeneic bone marrow chimeras.

Leo Luznik1, Jill E Slansky, Sanju Jalla, Ivan Borrello, Hyam I Levitsky, Drew M Pardoll, Ephraim J Fuchs.   

Abstract

A frequent outcome of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT) in the treatment of leukemia is the destruction of the host hematolymphoid compartment and, thus, the malignancy, through the combined action of high-dose chemoradiotherapy and a T-cell-mediated graft-versus-host effect. Unfortunately, alloSCT is frequently limited by toxicity, including graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and has not been successful in the treatment of tumors derived from solid organs. Here we report a novel cooperation between host and donor T cells in the response to a tumor cell vaccine given after a nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation (NST) protocol that achieves stable mixed bone marrow chimerism. Treatment of animals with NST, posttransplantation donor lymphocyte infusions (DLIs), and a vaccine, comprising irradiated autologous tumor cells mixed with a granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-producing bystander line, results in potent and specific antitumor immunity. This combined modality immunotherapy, administered after surgical removal of the primary tumor, cured metastatic mammary cancer in most animals without inducing GVHD. Cured animals contained tumor-specific T cells of both host and donor origin, but immunodeficient hosts could not be cured by NST, DLI, and vaccine administration. Thus, transfer of allogeneic donor T cells may help break functional tolerance of a host immune system to a solid tumor, thereby providing a rationale for the generation of mixed hematopoietic chimerism by NST prior to tumor cell vaccination.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12406877     DOI: 10.1182/blood-2002-07-2233

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  20 in total

1.  Tumor immunotherapy across MHC barriers using allogeneic T-cell precursors.

Authors:  Johannes L Zakrzewski; David Suh; John C Markley; Odette M Smith; Christopher King; Gabrielle L Goldberg; Robert Jenq; Amanda M Holland; Jeremy Grubin; Javier Cabrera-Perez; Renier J Brentjens; Sydney X Lu; Gabrielle Rizzuto; Derek B Sant'Angelo; Isabelle Riviere; Michel Sadelain; Glenn Heller; Juan Carlos Zúñiga-Pflücker; Chen Lu; Marcel R M van den Brink
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2008-03-30       Impact factor: 54.908

2.  Relating TCR-peptide-MHC affinity to immunogenicity for the design of tumor vaccines.

Authors:  Rachel H McMahan; Jennifer A McWilliams; Kimberly R Jordan; Steven W Dow; Darcy B Wilson; Jill E Slansky
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2006-08-24       Impact factor: 14.808

3.  Is there really a specific graft-versus-leukaemia effect?

Authors:  R P Gale; E J Fuchs
Journal:  Bone Marrow Transplant       Date:  2016-07-11       Impact factor: 5.483

4.  Visualization of immune response kinetics in full allogeneic chimeras.

Authors:  Gregory Elkin; Tatyana B Prigozhina; Shimon Slavin; Olga Gurevitch; Sofia Khitrin; Igor B Resnick
Journal:  Am J Blood Res       Date:  2011-08-22

Review 5.  Chemoimmunotherapy: reengineering tumor immunity.

Authors:  Gang Chen; Leisha A Emens
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 6.968

Review 6.  Chemotherapy and tumor immunity: an unexpected collaboration.

Authors:  Leisha A Emens
Journal:  Front Biosci       Date:  2008-01-01

7.  Partial CD4 depletion reduces regulatory T cells induced by multiple vaccinations and restores therapeutic efficacy.

Authors:  Michael G LaCelle; Shawn M Jensen; Bernard A Fox
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2009-11-10       Impact factor: 12.531

8.  Depletion of tumor-induced Treg prior to reconstitution rescues enhanced priming of tumor-specific, therapeutic effector T cells in lymphopenic hosts.

Authors:  Christian H Poehlein; Daniel P Haley; Edwin B Walker; Bernard A Fox
Journal:  Eur J Immunol       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 5.532

9.  Potent tumor-specific protection ignited by adoptively transferred CD4+ T cells.

Authors:  Zuqiang Liu; Hae S Noh; Janet Chen; Jin H Kim; Louis D Falo; Zhaoyang You
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2008-09-15       Impact factor: 5.422

10.  Ineffective vaccination against solid tumors can be enhanced by hematopoietic cell transplantation.

Authors:  Alexander Filatenkov; Antonia M S Müller; William Wei-Lin Tseng; Sussan Dejbakhsh-Jones; Daniel Winer; Richard Luong; Judith A Shizuru; Edgar G Engleman; Samuel Strober
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2009-11-04       Impact factor: 5.422

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