Literature DB >> 30520800

A pilot clinical trial testing topical resiquimod and a xenopeptide as immune adjuvants for a melanoma vaccine targeting MART-1.

Matthew S Block1, Wendy K Nevala2, Yuan-Ping Pang3, Jacob B Allred4, Carrie Strand4, Svetomir N Markovic1.   

Abstract

A vaccine that could expand melanoma-specific T cells might reduce the risk of recurrence of resected melanoma and could provide an alternative or adjunct to standard immunotherapy options. We tested the safety and immunogenicity of a vaccine coupling a melanoma-associated peptide with a xenogenic peptide (to promote epitope spreading) and/or resiquimod (to activate antigen-presenting cells). HLA-A2-positive patients with resected stage II, III, and IV melanoma were assigned to treatment on one of three schedules. All patients received three subcutaneous doses of the peptide MART-1a mixed with Montanide. In addition, patients on schedule 1 received the xenoantigen peptide Gag267-274, patients on schedule 2 received topical resiquimod, and patients on schedule 3 received both Gag267-274 and resiquimod. Blood samples were tested for the frequency of antigen-specific T cells by tetramer assay, as well as immune cell subtypes and plasma cytokine levels. Patients enrolled from October 2012 to December 2014, with 10 patients enrolling to each schedule. The most common adverse events were injection site reaction (26 patients) and fatigue (15 patients). Tetramer analysis revealed antigen-specific responses (defined as doubling of MART-1a-specific T cells from pretreatment to post-treatment) in 20, 60, and 40% of patients treated on schedules 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Vaccine treatment consisting of MART-1a peptide, Gag267-274, Montanide, and topical resiquimod was well-tolerated. The addition of the Gag267-274 xenoantigen was not associated with an increase in the response to MART-1a, whereas use of topical resiquimod was associated with a higher frequency of MART-1a-specific T-cell responses that did not meet statistical significance.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30520800     DOI: 10.1097/CMR.0000000000000556

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Melanoma Res        ISSN: 0960-8931            Impact factor:   3.599


  4 in total

1.  Phase I/II trial of a long peptide vaccine (LPV7) plus toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists with or without incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) for resected high-risk melanoma.

Authors:  Sapna P Patel; Gina R Petroni; Jason Roszik; Walter C Olson; Nolan A Wages; Kimberly A Chianese-Bullock; Mark Smolkin; Nikole Varhegyi; Elizabeth Gaughan; Kelly T Smith; Kathleen Haden; Emily H Hall; Sacha Gnjatic; Patrick Hwu; Craig L Slingluff
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2021-08       Impact factor: 13.751

2.  MuSyC dosing of adjuvanted cancer vaccines optimizes antitumor responses.

Authors:  David Taylor; Christian T Meyer; Diana Graves; Rupashree Sen; Juan Fu; Emily Tran; Bilal Mirza; Gabriel Rodriguez; Cara Lang; Hanwen Feng; Vito Quaranta; John T Wilson; Young J Kim; Michael J Korrer
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-08-19       Impact factor: 8.786

Review 3.  Targeting nuclear acid-mediated immunity in cancer immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies.

Authors:  Miaoqin Chen; Shiman Hu; Yiling Li; Ting Ting Jiang; Hongchuan Jin; Lifeng Feng
Journal:  Signal Transduct Target Ther       Date:  2020-11-20

4.  Adjuvant-pulsed mRNA vaccine nanoparticle for immunoprophylactic and therapeutic tumor suppression in mice.

Authors:  Mohammad Ariful Islam; Jamie Rice; Emma Reesor; Harshal Zope; Wei Tao; Michael Lim; Jianxun Ding; Yunhan Chen; Dike Aduluso; Bruce R Zetter; Omid C Farokhzad; Jinjun Shi
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 12.479

  4 in total

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