| Literature DB >> 32728218 |
Ugur Sahin1,2,3,4, Petra Oehm5, Evelyna Derhovanessian5, Robert A Jabulowsky5, Mathias Vormehr5, Maike Gold5, Daniel Maurus5, Doreen Schwarck-Kokarakis5, Andreas N Kuhn5, Tana Omokoko5, Lena M Kranz5, Mustafa Diken5,6, Sebastian Kreiter5,6, Heinrich Haas5, Sebastian Attig6,7, Richard Rae6, Katarina Cuk5, Alexandra Kemmer-Brück5, Andrea Breitkreuz5, Claudia Tolliver5, Janina Caspar5, Juliane Quinkhardt5, Lisa Hebich5, Malte Stein5, Alexander Hohberger6, Isabel Vogler5, Inga Liebig5, Stephanie Renken5, Julian Sikorski5, Melanie Leierer8, Verena Müller9,10, Heidrun Mitzel-Rink11, Matthias Miederer12, Christoph Huber5,6, Stephan Grabbe11, Jochen Utikal9,10, Andreas Pinter13, Roland Kaufmann13, Jessica C Hassel8, Carmen Loquai11, Özlem Türeci5,14.
Abstract
Treating patients who have cancer with vaccines that stimulate a targeted immune response is conceptually appealing, but cancer vaccine trials have not been successful in late-stage patients with treatment-refractory tumours1,2. We are testing melanoma FixVac (BNT111)-an intravenously administered liposomal RNA (RNA-LPX) vaccine, which targets four non-mutated, tumour-associated antigens that are prevalent in melanoma-in an ongoing, first-in-human, dose-escalation phase I trial in patients with advanced melanoma (Lipo-MERIT trial, ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02410733). We report here data from an exploratory interim analysis that show that melanoma FixVac, alone or in combination with blockade of the checkpoint inhibitor PD1, mediates durable objective responses in checkpoint-inhibitor (CPI)-experienced patients with unresectable melanoma. Clinical responses are accompanied by the induction of strong CD4+ and CD8+ T cell immunity against the vaccine antigens. The antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cell responses in some responders reach magnitudes typically reported for adoptive T-cell therapy, and are durable. Our findings indicate that RNA-LPX vaccination is a potent immunotherapy in patients with CPI-experienced melanoma, and suggest the general utility of non-mutant shared tumour antigens as targets for cancer vaccination.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32728218 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2537-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962