Literature DB >> 17916462

Cell based cancer vaccines: regulatory and commercial development.

John Copier1, Stephen Ward, Angus Dalgleish.   

Abstract

There is both clinical and regulatory drive to expedite development of safe, efficacious cancer therapies. Stimulation of the patients immune system through vaccination with tumour cells has long been at the vanguard of cancer therapeutic vaccines, and several have been demonstrated to be safe and to have efficacy in early clinical trials for a range of cancers including melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, prostate and colorectal cancers. A number of development-stage vaccines and strategies are currently being tested, utilising either autologous or allogeneic tumour cells, which may also have been ex vivo manipulated (e.g. cytokine transfected cells). It seems likely that clinical trial success, and hence patient benefit, could be improved through better patient identification, possibly by the discovery and use of novel immune response biomarkers. In this review, we aim to summarise the state of tumour cell vaccines in commercial development and to explore not only the difficulties of determining efficacy, but also the production challenges faced when developing a vaccine from proof of principle to pivotal phase III trials.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17916462     DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2007.06.041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vaccine        ISSN: 0264-410X            Impact factor:   3.641


  9 in total

Review 1.  Victory and defeat in the induction of a therapeutic response through vaccine therapy for human and canine brain tumors: a review of the state of the art.

Authors:  Michael R Olin; G Elizabeth Pluhar; Brian M Andersen; Rob Shaver; Nate N Waldron; Christopher L Moertel
Journal:  Crit Rev Immunol       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 2.214

2.  Systemic therapy of disseminated myeloma in passively immunized mice using measles virus-infected cell carriers.

Authors:  Chunsheng Liu; Stephen J Russell; Kah-Whye Peng
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2010-03-16       Impact factor: 11.454

Review 3.  Overview of cancer vaccines: considerations for development.

Authors:  Alex Kudrin
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2012-08-16       Impact factor: 3.452

4.  Superior efficacy of tumor cell vaccines grown in physiologic oxygen.

Authors:  Michael R Olin; Brian M Andersen; David M Zellmer; Patrick T Grogan; Flavia E Popescu; Zhengming Xiong; Colleen L Forster; Charlie Seiler; Karen S SantaCruz; Wei Chen; Bruce R Blazar; John R Ohlfest
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2010-09-21       Impact factor: 12.531

5.  The tumor protection effect of high-frequency administration of whole tumor cell vaccine and enhanced efficacy by the protein component from Agrocybe aegerita.

Authors:  Yi Liang; Hui Sun
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-05-15

Review 6.  Focus on TILs: prognostic significance of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes in human melanoma.

Authors:  Darryl A Oble; Robert Loewe; Ping Yu; Martin C Mihm
Journal:  Cancer Immun       Date:  2009-04-02

7.  Bead-selected antitumor genetic cell vaccines.

Authors:  Mj Herrero; Botella R; Algás R; Fm Marco; Sf Aliño
Journal:  Clin Med Oncol       Date:  2008-03-25

8.  Effective pressure and treatment duration of high hydrostatic pressure to prepare melanoma vaccines.

Authors:  Kai Liu; Shuai Yan; Zhanchuan Ma; Bin Liu
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2020-05-21       Impact factor: 2.967

9.  Selected anti-tumor vaccines merit a place in multimodal tumor therapies.

Authors:  Eva-Maria Weiss; Roland Wunderlich; Nina Ebel; Yvonne Rubner; Eberhard Schlücker; Roland Meyer-Pittroff; Oliver J Ott; Rainer Fietkau; Udo S Gaipl; Benjamin Frey
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2012-10-09       Impact factor: 6.244

  9 in total

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