| Literature DB >> 21048926 |
Luis E Fernandez1, Mariano R Gabri, Marcelo D Guthmann, Roberto E Gomez, Silvia Gold, Leonardo Fainboim, Daniel E Gomez, Daniel F Alonso.
Abstract
Active specific immunotherapy is a promising field in cancer research. N-glycolyl (NGc) gangliosides, and particularly NGcGM3, have received attention as a privileged target for cancer therapy. Many clinical trials have been performed with the anti-NGc-containing gangliosides anti-idiotype monoclonal antibody racotumomab (formerly known as 1E10) and the conjugated NGcGM3/VSSP vaccine for immunotherapy of melanoma, breast, and lung cancer. The present paper examines the role of NGc-gangliosides in tumor biology as well as the available preclinical and clinical data on these vaccine products. A brief discussion on the relevance of prioritization of cancer antigens in vaccine development is also included.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21048926 PMCID: PMC2965427 DOI: 10.1155/2010/814397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
N-glycosylated (NGc) ganglioside-based cancer vaccines.
| Vaccine | Product description | Target antigen | Potential indications | Clinical Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Racotumomab | Anti-idiotype murine mAb (1E10 antibody) | NGc-containing gangliosides | Lung cancer Breast cancerPediatric tumors? | Ongoing Phase III |
| NGcGM3/VSSP | Ganglioside conjugated with bacterial proteoliposomes | NGcGM3 ganglioside | Breast cancer Melanoma Sarcoma? | Ongoing Phase III |
Figure 1NGc gangliosides in human tumor biology. Although NGcGM3 is practically undetectable in healthy human tissues as a result of an Alu-mediated inactivation of the gene, the ganglioside is highly expressed in several human cancer cells presumably due to incorporation of dietary NGc.
Relevant characteristics of NGcGM3 ganglioside as a cancer antigen, according to the antigen prioritization criteria described by Cheever et al. [7].
| Criteria | Data on NGcGM3 |
|---|---|
| Therapeutic function | Clinical data showing that a vaccine-induced clinical responses in at least a small number of patients [ |
| Immunogenicity | T cell [ |
| Oncogenicity | Increased expression in adult [ |
| Specificity | Overexpressed in cancer with little or no expression in normal adult tissues [ |
| Expression level and % positive cells | Highly expressed on most cancer cells in patients designated for treatment [ |
| Stem cell expression | Expression on most cancer cells [ |
| No. of patients with antigen-positive cancers | High level of expression in >80% of patients with a particular tumor type [ |
| No. of antigen epitopes | Short antigenic segment with one or few epitopes [ |
| Cellular location of antigen expression | Expressed on the cell surface [ |