Literature DB >> 12620155

HER2 dendritic cell vaccines.

Michael A Morse1, Timothy M Clay, Kirsten Colling, Amy Hobeika, Ken Grabstein, Martin A Cheever, H Kim Lyerly.   

Abstract

HER2/neu, a tumor antigen overexpressed by a third of breast cancers, is a potential target for vaccine therapies. A particularly potent immunization strategy to induce T-cell responses against tumor antigens is to use dendritic cells (DCs) loaded with the tumor antigen. We performed two small studies to test the safety, feasibility, and immunologic and clinical responses to immunizations with in vitro-generated DCs loaded with either a human leukocyte antigen A2-restricted peptide fragment of the extracellular domain of the tumor antigen HER2 (E75) or a HER2 intracellular domain (ICD) protein in patients with high-risk resected breast cancer or metastatic cancers expressing HER2. There were no toxicities due to the immunizations in any of the patients. In the study of DCs loaded with the E75 peptide, 1 of 6 patients with metastatic HER2-expressing malignancies who completed all immunizations had stable disease for 6 months; the remainder of the patients had progressive disease. Delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactivity (2-3 mm of induration) at E75-loaded DC injection sites was observed in 2 of 5 patients evaluated but was similar at the unloaded DC injection sites. In 2 patients, the DTH sites underwent biopsy and a perivascular infiltrate of CD4 and CD8 cells was demonstrated, which was greater in the E75-loaded DC injection sites than in the unloaded DC sites. In the pilot study of ICD-loaded DC in patients with high-risk resected breast cancer, all 3 patients enrolled had no evidence of recurrence at a follow-up of up to 2.5 years. Intracellular domain-specific T-cell responses were detected directly from the peripheral blood by enzyme-linked immunospot and proliferation assay in 2 patients. We conclude that it is feasible and safe to generate and administer HER2-loaded DCs to patients with advanced HER2/neu-expressing malignancies and high-risk breast cancer. The magnitude of the immune responses generated is fairly modest, and more potent DC loading and maturation strategies will be necessary to optimize these vaccines.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12620155     DOI: 10.3816/cbc.2003.s.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer        ISSN: 1526-8209            Impact factor:   3.225


  7 in total

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Review 2.  Tumor vaccines for breast cancer.

Authors:  Karen S Anderson
Journal:  Cancer Invest       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 2.176

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Authors:  M-Y Bae; N-H Cho; S-Y Seong
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4.  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

Review 5.  Antigen-specific active immunotherapy for ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Sterre T Paijens; Ninke Leffers; Toos Daemen; Wijnand Helfrich; H Marike Boezen; Ben J Cohlen; Cornelis Jm Melief; Marco de Bruyn; Hans W Nijman
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2018-09-10

6.  Long term disease-free survival and T cell and antibody responses in women with high-risk Her2+ breast cancer following vaccination against Her2.

Authors:  Michael A Morse; Amy Hobeika; Takuya Osada; Donna Niedzwiecki; Paul Kelly Marcom; Kimberly L Blackwell; Carey Anders; Gayathri R Devi; H Kim Lyerly; Timothy M Clay
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2007-09-06       Impact factor: 5.531

7.  Stimulation of Oncogene-Specific Tumor-Infiltrating T Cells through Combined Vaccine and αPD-1 Enable Sustained Antitumor Responses against Established HER2 Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Erika J Crosby; Chaitanya R Acharya; Anthony-Fayez Haddad; Christopher A Rabiola; Gangjun Lei; Jun-Ping Wei; Xiao-Yi Yang; Tao Wang; Cong-Xiao Liu; Kay U Wagner; William J Muller; Lewis A Chodosh; Gloria Broadwater; Terry Hyslop; Jonathan H Shepherd; Daniel P Hollern; Xiaping He; Charles M Perou; Shengjie Chai; Benjamin K Ashby; Benjamin G Vincent; Joshua C Snyder; Jeremy Force; Michael A Morse; Herbert K Lyerly; Zachary C Hartman
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2020-07-30       Impact factor: 13.801

  7 in total

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