| Literature DB >> 33723260 |
Janos L Tanyi1, Cheryl L-L Chiang2, Johanna Chiffelle3, Anne-Christine Thierry4, Petra Baumgartener4, Florian Huber3, Christine Goepfert5,6, David Tarussio4, Stephanie Tissot4, Drew A Torigian7, Harvey L Nisenbaum7, Brian J Stevenson3, Hajer Fritah Guiren3, Ritaparna Ahmed3, Anne-Laure Huguenin-Bergenat3, Emese Zsiros1, Michal Bassani-Sternberg3, Rosemarie Mick8, Daniel J Powell1, George Coukos3, Alexandre Harari3,4, Lana E Kandalaft9,10.
Abstract
T cells are important for controlling ovarian cancer (OC). We previously demonstrated that combinatorial use of a personalized whole-tumor lysate-pulsed dendritic cell vaccine (OCDC), bevacizumab (Bev), and cyclophosphamide (Cy) elicited neoantigen-specific T cells and prolonged OC survival. Here, we hypothesize that adding acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) and low-dose interleukin (IL)-2 would increase the vaccine efficacy in a recurrent advanced OC phase I trial (NCT01132014). By adding ASA and low-dose IL-2 to the OCDC-Bev-Cy combinatorial regimen, we elicited vaccine-specific T-cell responses that positively correlated with patients' prolonged time-to-progression and overall survival. In the ID8 ovarian model, animals receiving the same regimen showed prolonged survival, increased tumor-infiltrating perforin-producing T cells, increased neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells, and reduced endothelial Fas ligand expression and tumor-infiltrating T-regulatory cells. This combinatorial strategy was efficacious and also highlighted the predictive value of the ID8 model for future ovarian trial development.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33723260 PMCID: PMC7960755 DOI: 10.1038/s41541-021-00297-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Vaccines ISSN: 2059-0105 Impact factor: 7.344