Literature DB >> 20884630

Improved clinical outcome in indolent B-cell lymphoma patients vaccinated with autologous tumor cells experiencing immunogenic death.

Roberta Zappasodi1, Serenella M Pupa, Gaia C Ghedini, Italia Bongarzone, Michele Magni, Antonello D Cabras, Mario P Colombo, Carmelo Carlo-Stella, Alessandro M Gianni, Massimo Di Nicola.   

Abstract

Increasing evidence argues that the success of an anticancer treatment may rely on immunoadjuvant side effects including the induction of immunogenic tumor cell death. Based on the assumption that this death mechanism is a similar prerequisite for the efficacy of an active immunotherapy using killed tumor cells, we examined a vaccination strategy using dendritic cells (DC) loaded with apoptotic and necrotic cell bodies derived from autologous tumors. Using this approach, clinical and immunologic responses were achieved in 6 of 18 patients with relapsed indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). The present report illustrates an impaired ability of the neoplastic cells used to vaccinate nonresponders to undergo immunogenic death on exposure to a cell death protocol based on heat shock, γ-ray, and UVC ray. Interestingly, when compared with doxorubicin, this treatment increased surface translocation of calreticulin and cellular release of high-mobility group box 1 and ATP in histologically distinct NHL cell lines. In contrast, treated lymphoma cells from responders displayed higher amounts of calreticulin and heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) compared with those from nonresponders and boosted the production of specific antibodies when loaded into DCs for vaccination. Accordingly, the extent of calreticulin and HSP90 surface expression in the DC antigenic cargo was significantly associated with the clinical and immunologic responses achieved. Our results indicate that a positive clinical effect is obtained when immunogenically killed autologous neoplastic cells are used for the generation of a DC-based vaccine. Therapeutic improvements may thus be accomplished by circumventing the tumor-impaired ability to undergo immunogenic death and prime the antitumor immune response.
Copyright © 2010 AACR.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20884630     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-1825

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


  55 in total

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4.  Exploiting a new strategy to induce immunogenic cell death to improve dendritic cell-based vaccines for lymphoma immunotherapy.

Authors:  B Montico; C Lapenta; M Ravo; D Martorelli; E Muraro; B Zeng; E Comaro; M Spada; S Donati; S M Santini; R Tarallo; G Giurato; F Rizzo; A Weisz; F Belardelli; R Dolcetti; J Dal Col
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2017-07-31       Impact factor: 8.110

Review 5.  Immunogenic versus tolerogenic phagocytosis during anticancer therapy: mechanisms and clinical translation.

Authors:  A D Garg; E Romano; N Rufo; P Agostinis
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Review 7.  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.

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Review 8.  Oncolytic virotherapy and immunogenic cancer cell death: sharpening the sword for improved cancer treatment strategies.

Authors:  Samuel T Workenhe; Karen L Mossman
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2013-10-19       Impact factor: 11.454

9.  Complementary induction of immunogenic cell death by oncolytic parvovirus H-1PV and gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Assia L Angelova; Svitlana P Grekova; Anette Heller; Olga Kuhlmann; Esther Soyka; Thomas Giese; Marc Aprahamian; Gaétan Bour; Sven Rüffer; Celina Cziepluch; Laurent Daeffler; Jean Rommelaere; Jens Werner; Zahari Raykov; Nathalia A Giese
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 10.  Danger signalling during cancer cell death: origins, plasticity and regulation.

Authors:  A D Garg; S Martin; J Golab; P Agostinis
Journal:  Cell Death Differ       Date:  2013-05-17       Impact factor: 15.828

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