| Literature DB >> 24804271 |
Linda W Xu1, Kevin K H Chow1, Michael Lim2, Gordon Li1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary brain tumor, and despite aggressive therapy with surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, average survival remains at about 1.5 years. The highly infiltrative and invasive nature of GBM requires that alternative treatments for this disease be widespread and targeted to tumor cells. Immunotherapy in the form of tumor vaccines has the potential to meet this need. Vaccines against GBM hold the promise of triggering specific and systemic antitumor immune responses that may be the key to eradicating this unrelenting cancer. In this review, we will discuss past and present clinical trials of various GBM vaccines and their potential impact on the future care of GBM patients. There have been many promising phase I and phase II GBM vaccine studies that have led to ongoing and upcoming phase III trials. If the results of these randomized trials show a survival benefit, immunotherapy will become a standard part of the treatment of this devastating disease.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24804271 PMCID: PMC3996322 DOI: 10.1155/2014/796856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Vaccine strategies.
| Products | Comments | |
|---|---|---|
| Whole tumor cell | Broad range of antigens, known and unknown | |
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| Patient-specific, customized, and of high cost of production | |
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| Based on one or more tumor cell lines, “off the shelf,” and easier to produce | |
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| Increase antitumor immunity, cytokine expression (IL-2, GM-CSF), and costimulatory molecules (B7-1) | |
| Dendritic cell | Most potent antigen presenting cell, highly specialized culture techniques | |
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| Broad array of antigens | |
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| Single or combination of antigens targeted, highly specific | |
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| Expression of cytokines or costimulatory molecules to enhance immunogenicity | |
| Protein | Single or combination, potential for autoimmunity | |
| Peptide | Minimize autoimmunity associated with whole protein and are easy to produce, cost-effective, and able to enhance immunogenicity and to quantify peptide specific T cell response with tetramer | |
| Heat-shock proteins | Purified from tumor cells, immune response to peptides carried by the HSPs | |
| Other | Viral and bacterial vectors, plasmid DNA | |
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| Adjuvants | ||
| TLR agonists | IFA (incomplete Freund's adjuvant), BCG, LPS (lipopolysaccharide), RNA, CpG DNA motifs, and MPL (monophosphoryl lipid A) | |
| Cytokines | IL-2, GM-CSF | |
| Costimulatory molecules | B7-1, B7-2, and CD40 | |
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| Delivery | ||
| Intradermal | Easy to administer and requires migration of DCs to draining lymph node or scavenging of antigens by endogenous DCs | |
| Intranodal | Theoretical advantage of bypassing need for lymph node migration, possible destruction of LN architecture, and questionable benefit | |
| Intratumoral | Enhance immunogenicity of tumor and may not be feasible for brain tumors | |
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| Combinatorial strategies | ||
| STAT3 inhibition | Reverse tumor induced STAT3 mediated immunosuppression | |
| PD-1 blockade | Enhance CD8 T cell function, effective in non-small-cell lung CA, melanoma, and renal cell CA | |
| Chemotherapy and radiation | Potential for upregulation of tumor antigens and MHC and decreased tumor burden | |
EGFRvIII vaccine trials.
| Trial name | Phase |
| Experimental design | PFS (mo) | OS (mo) | References |
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| VICTORI | I | 12 | Vaccine administered 60% sensitized | 10.2 | 22.8 | [ |
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| ACTIVATE | II | 19 | Vaccine + GM-CSF versus case matched controls | 12 | 47.7 in sensitized pts; 22.8 in nonsensitized pts |
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| ACT II | II | 22 | Vaccine + high dose short course TMZ versus low dose prolonged course TMZ. Improved immune sensitization in patients with prolonged TMZ treatment | 15.2 | 23.6 | [ |
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| ACT III | II | 65 | Vaccine + GM-CSF + TMZ versus TMZ | 12.3 | 24.6 |
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| ACT IV | III | Vaccine + GM-CSF + TMZ versus TMZ and placebo alone | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| ReACT | II | Relapsed GBM, vaccine + GM-CSF + bevacizumab versus bevacizumab | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Pediatric pontine glioma pilot study | I | Children with DIPG vaccine + GM-CSF after radiation | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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N: number of patients; PFS: progression-free survival; OS: overall survival.
GBM vaccine trials.
| Vaccine type | Phase |
| Experimental design | PFS (mo) | OS (mo) | References |
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| Tumor lysate vaccine | I | 12 | Autologous DC loaded with tumor lysate | 15.5 | 23.4 |
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| Tumor lysate vaccine | II | Resiquimod, poly-ICLC | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| DCVax-Brain | III | 2/3 vaccine, 1/3 placebo with option of crossover at disease progression | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Tumor lysate vaccine | II | Vaccine + standard therapy versus standard therapy alone | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Tumor lysate vaccine | II | 10 | DCs treated with PGE2 and TNF- | 9.5 | 28 |
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| IMA950 multipeptide vaccine | I | 11 tumor associated peptides (TUMAPs) + GM-CSF, cyclophosphamide, imiquimod | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Cancer stem cell vaccine, ICT-107 | I | 21 | Six synthetic peptides associated with CSCs loaded onto autologous DCs | 16.9 | 38.4 | [ |
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| Cancer stem cell vaccine, ICT-107 | II | Autologous DCs pulsed with immunogenic peptides from tumor antigens versus placebo | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Cancer stem cell vaccine | II | Autologous DCs loaded with stem cell-like antigens from irradiated GBM versus placebo | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| CMV vaccine (Pep-CMV) | I | Intradermal Pep-CMV following chemoradiation | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Alpha type I DC peptide vaccine | I/II | 22 | Four peptides loaded onto alpha type I DCs + poly-ICLC, included GBM and anaplastic glioma | 4 in GBM 13 in anaplastic glioma |
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| HSPPC-96 | I | 12 | Autologous tumor derived HSPPC-96 administered intradermally | 47 weeks in immune responders 16 weeks in nonresponder | [ | |
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| HSPPC-96 | II | Autologous tumor derived HSPPC-96 administered intradermally | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| HSPPC-96 | II | Vaccine + bevacizumab versus bevacizumab alone | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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| Irradiated glioma cells with GM-K562 | I | Admixture of lethally irradiate glioma cells with GM-CSF producing K562 injected intradermally | Ongoing | Ongoing |
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