Literature DB >> 17293384

Targeting HER-2/neu in early breast cancer development using dendritic cells with staged interleukin-12 burst secretion.

Brian J Czerniecki1, Gary K Koski, Ursula Koldovsky, Shuwen Xu, Peter A Cohen, Rosemarie Mick, Harvey Nisenbaum, Terry Pasha, Min Xu, Kevin R Fox, Susan Weinstein, Susan G Orel, Robert Vonderheide, George Coukos, Angela DeMichele, Louis Araujo, Francis R Spitz, Mark Rosen, Bruce L Levine, Carl June, Paul J Zhang.   

Abstract

Overexpression of HER-2/neu (c-erbB2) is associated with increased risk of recurrent disease in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and a poorer prognosis in node-positive breast cancer. We therefore examined the early immunotherapeutic targeting of HER-2/neu in DCIS. Before surgical resection, HER-2/neu(pos) DCIS patients (n = 13) received 4 weekly vaccinations of dendritic cells pulsed with HER-2/neu HLA class I and II peptides. The vaccine dendritic cells were activated in vitro with IFN-gamma and bacterial lipopolysaccharide to become highly polarized DC1-type dendritic cells that secrete high levels of interleukin-12p70 (IL-12p70). Intranodal delivery of dendritic cells supplied both antigenic stimulation and a synchronized preconditioned burst of IL-12p70 production directly to the anatomic site of T-cell sensitization. Before vaccination, many subjects possessed HER-2/neu-HLA-A2 tetramer-staining CD8(pos) T cells that expressed low levels of CD28 and high levels of the inhibitory B7 ligand CTLA-4, but this ratio inverted after vaccination. The vaccinated subjects also showed high rates of peptide-specific sensitization for both IFN-gamma-secreting CD4(pos) (85%) and CD8(pos) (80%) T cells, with recognition of antigenically relevant breast cancer lines, accumulation of T and B lymphocytes in the breast, and induction of complement-dependent, tumor-lytic antibodies. Seven of 11 evaluable patients also showed markedly decreased HER-2/neu expression in surgical tumor specimens, often with measurable decreases in residual DCIS, suggesting an active process of "immunoediting" for HER-2/neu-expressing tumor cells following vaccination. DC1 vaccination strategies may therefore have potential for both the prevention and the treatment of early breast cancer.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17293384     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-4038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  109 in total

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Review 7.  Breast cancer immunobiology driving immunotherapy: vaccines and immune checkpoint blockade.

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8.  Does HER-2/neu antigen loss in metastatic breast tumors occur under immune pressure?

Authors:  Masoud H Manjili; Maciej Kmieciak
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10.  Improved Survival of HER2+ Breast Cancer Patients Treated with Trastuzumab and Chemotherapy Is Associated with Host Antibody Immunity against the HER2 Intracellular Domain.

Authors:  Keith L Knutson; Raphael Clynes; Barath Shreeder; Patrick Yeramian; Kathleen P Kemp; Karla Ballman; Kathleen S Tenner; Courtney L Erskine; Nadine Norton; Donald Northfelt; Winston Tan; Carmen Calfa; Mark Pegram; Elizabeth A Mittendorf; Edith A Perez
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2016-04-20       Impact factor: 12.701

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