Literature DB >> 32240562

An Open-Label Study of the Safety and Efficacy of Tag-7 Gene-Modified Tumor Cells-Based Vaccine in Patients with Locally Advanced or Metastatic Malignant Melanoma or Renal Cell Cancer.

Aleksei Viktorovich Novik1,2, Anna Borisovna Danilova1, Maksim Ivanovich Sluzhev3, Tatiana Leonidovna Nehaeva1, Sergei Sergeevich Larin4, Dmitry Viktorovich Girdyuk1, Svetlana Anatolevna Protsenko5, Anna Igorevna Semenova1,5, Aleksei Olegovich Danilov6, Vladimir Mikhailovich Moiseyenko7, Georgii Pavlovich Georgiev8, Irina Aleksandrovna Baldueva1.   

Abstract

LESSONS LEARNED: This study showed that carefully selected patients with locally advanced and metastatic forms of malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma could potentially have long-term disease control with a tag-7 gene-modified tumor cells-based vaccine. Randomized clinical trials in patients whose tumors produce low amounts of immunosuppressive factors are needed to confirm this hypothesis in both the adjuvant and metastatic settings.
BACKGROUND: Immunotherapy may produce long-lasting effects on survival and toxicity. The magnitude of efficacy may be dependent on immune factors. We analyzed the results of a phase I/II study of a tag-7 gene-modified tumor cells-based vaccine (GMV) in patients with malignant melanoma (MM) or renal cell carcinoma (RCC) with biomarker analysis of immunosuppressive factors (ISFs) production by their tumor cells.
METHODS: From 2001 to 2014, 80 patients received GMV: 68 with MM and 12 with RCC. Treatment in the metastatic setting included 61 patients (MM, 51; RCC, 10), and treatment in the adjuvant setting (after complete cytoreduction) included 19 patients (MM, 17; RCC, 2). Twenty-six patients were stage III (33%), and 54 (67%) were stage IV. The patients' tumor samples were transferred to culture, transfected with tag-7 gene, and inactivated by radiation. The produced product was injected subcutaneously every 3 weeks until progression or 2 years of therapy. ISFs were measured in the supernatants of the tumor cell cultures and used as predictive factors.
RESULTS: No major safety issues or grade 5 adverse events (AEs) were seen. One grade 4 and two grade 3 AEs were registered. No AEs were registered in 89.4% of treatment cycles. No delayed AE was found. The 5-year overall survival (OS) in the intention-to-treat population was 25.1%. There were no differences between MM OS and RCC OS (log rank, p = .44). Median OS in the metastatic setting was 0.7 years and in the adjuvant setting was 3.1 years. Classification trees were built on the basis of ISF production (Fig. 1). The median OS was 6.6 years in the favorable prognosis (FP) group (major histocompatibility complex class I polypeptide-related sequence A [MICA] level ≤582 pg/mL, n = 15) and 4.6 months in the unfavorable (UF) group (MICA level >582 pg/mL, n = 12; p < .0001). No significant differences were found between classification trees based on ISFs (transforming growth factor β1 [TGF-β1], interleukin-10 [IL-10], and vascular endothelial growth factor [VEGF]). In patients with stage III-IV MM with FP, median OS was 2.3 years, with 31% patients alive at 10 years (Fig. 2) in the UF group (0.4 years; log rank, p = 1.94E-5). No FP patients received modern immunotherapy.
CONCLUSION: GMV showed high results in carefully selected patients with low ISF (TGF-β1, IL-10, and VEGF) production. The method should be further investigated in patients with FP. © AlphaMed Press; the data published online to support this summary are the property of the authors.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32240562      PMCID: PMC7485366          DOI: 10.1634/theoncologist.2020-0160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncologist        ISSN: 1083-7159


  25 in total

Review 1.  An update on the relevance of vaccine research for the treatment of metastatic melanoma.

Authors:  Robert O Dillman
Journal:  Melanoma Manag       Date:  2017-11-23

Review 2.  Tumor-derived factors affecting immune cells.

Authors:  Vincenzo Russo; Maria Pia Protti
Journal:  Cytokine Growth Factor Rev       Date:  2017-06-08       Impact factor: 7.638

3.  Pembrolizumab versus Chemotherapy for PD-L1-Positive Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Martin Reck; Delvys Rodríguez-Abreu; Andrew G Robinson; Rina Hui; Tibor Csőszi; Andrea Fülöp; Maya Gottfried; Nir Peled; Ali Tafreshi; Sinead Cuffe; Mary O'Brien; Suman Rao; Katsuyuki Hotta; Melanie A Leiby; Gregory M Lubiniecki; Yue Shentu; Reshma Rangwala; Julie R Brahmer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2016-10-08       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  MAGE-A3 immunotherapeutic as adjuvant therapy for patients with resected, MAGE-A3-positive, stage III melanoma (DERMA): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Brigitte Dreno; John F Thompson; Bernard Mark Smithers; Mario Santinami; Thomas Jouary; Ralf Gutzmer; Evgeny Levchenko; Piotr Rutkowski; Jean-Jacques Grob; Sergii Korovin; Kamil Drucis; Florent Grange; Laurent Machet; Peter Hersey; Ivana Krajsova; Alessandro Testori; Robert Conry; Bernard Guillot; Wim H J Kruit; Lev Demidov; John A Thompson; Igor Bondarenko; Jaroslaw Jaroszek; Susana Puig; Gabriela Cinat; Axel Hauschild; Jelle J Goeman; Hans C van Houwelingen; Fernando Ulloa-Montoya; Andrea Callegaro; Benjamin Dizier; Bart Spiessens; Muriel Debois; Vincent G Brichard; Jamila Louahed; Patrick Therasse; Channa Debruyne; John M Kirkwood
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2018-06-13       Impact factor: 41.316

5.  Ecological therapy for cancer: defining tumors using an ecosystem paradigm suggests new opportunities for novel cancer treatments.

Authors:  Kenneth J Pienta; Natalie McGregor; Robert Axelrod; David E Axelrod
Journal:  Transl Oncol       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 4.243

6.  New response evaluation criteria in solid tumours: revised RECIST guideline (version 1.1).

Authors:  E A Eisenhauer; P Therasse; J Bogaerts; L H Schwartz; D Sargent; R Ford; J Dancey; S Arbuck; S Gwyther; M Mooney; L Rubinstein; L Shankar; L Dodd; R Kaplan; D Lacombe; J Verweij
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 9.162

7.  Cytotoxic T lymphocytes carrying a pattern recognition protein Tag7 can detect evasive, HLA-negative but Hsp70-exposing tumor cells, thereby ensuring FasL/Fas-mediated contact killing.

Authors:  Lidia P Sashchenko; Elena A Dukhanina; Yury V Shatalov; Denis V Yashin; Tamara I Lukyanova; Olga D Kabanova; Elena A Romanova; Sergei V Khaidukov; Alexander V Galkin; Nikolai V Gnuchev; Georgii P Georgiev
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2007-06-05       Impact factor: 22.113

Review 8.  Mechanism-driven biomarkers to guide immune checkpoint blockade in cancer therapy.

Authors:  Suzanne L Topalian; Janis M Taube; Robert A Anders; Drew M Pardoll
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2016-04-15       Impact factor: 60.716

9.  Follow-up analysis of a randomized phase III immunotherapeutic clinical trial on melanoma.

Authors:  Robert Suriano; Shilpi Rajoria; Andrea L George; Jan Geliebter; Raj K Tiwari; Marc Wallack
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2013-03-20

Review 10.  Hallmarks of cancer: the next generation.

Authors:  Douglas Hanahan; Robert A Weinberg
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2011-03-04       Impact factor: 41.582

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