| Literature DB >> 34207062 |
Howard Donninger1,2, Chi Li1,3, John W Eaton2,4, Kavitha Yaddanapudi4,5,6.
Abstract
The advent of cancer immunotherapy has revolutionized the field of cancer treatment and offers cancer patients new hope. Although this therapy has proved highly successful for some patients, its efficacy is not all encompassing and several cancer types do not respond. Cancer vaccines offer an alternate approach to promote anti-tumor immunity that differ in their mode of action from antibody-based therapies. Cancer vaccines serve to balance the equilibrium of the crosstalk between the tumor cells and the host immune system. Recent advances in understanding the nature of tumor-mediated tolerogenicity and antigen presentation has aided in the identification of tumor antigens that have the potential to enhance anti-tumor immunity. Cancer vaccines can either be prophylactic (preventative) or therapeutic (curative). An exciting option for therapeutic vaccines is the emergence of personalized vaccines, which are tailor-made and specific for tumor type and individual patient. This review summarizes the current standing of the most promising vaccine strategies with respect to their development and clinical efficacy. We also discuss prospects for future development of stem cell-based prophylactic vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: cancer vaccines; immunotherapy; personalized vaccines; preventative vaccines; therapeutic vaccines
Year: 2021 PMID: 34207062 PMCID: PMC8233841 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9060668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Various anti-cancer vaccines including prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination strategies.
| Cancer Vaccine | Strategy | Vaccine Type | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preventive | Viral antigens-based vaccines | HBV | Highly efficacious | Restricted to cancers with known etiopathogenic agents |
| Retired antigens-based vaccines | AMHR2-ED | Specific for adult onset non- viral associated cancers | Only applicable to cancer types with known retired antigens | |
| Embryonic material-based vaccines | Intact ES cells | Comprehensive immune responses against multiple antigens; | Complex and costly manufacture procedure | |
| Therapeutic | Cell-based vaccines | Gvax | High antigenic immunogenic potency; | Risk for vaccine-triggered adversary effects; |
| Viral vector- or bacterial vector-based vaccines | PROSTVAC | High antigenic immunogenic potency; | Host-induced immune responses to vectors; | |
| Peptide-based vaccines | CTAG1B | Low risk for vaccine-triggered adversary effects; | Modest antigenic immunogenic potency; | |
| DNA- or RNA-based vaccines | RNA-based neo-epitopes | Flexible to deliver multiple antigens; | Modest antigenic immunogenic potency; |
Figure 1Multiple immune-inhibitory pathways operate within the tumor microenvironment that limit the efficacy of ICIs as well as cancer vaccines. A combinatorial approach consisting of cancer vaccine and ICIs can lead to optimal priming of anti-tumoral immune responses that ultimately orchestrate tumor eradication. The efficacy of this combination approach is somewhat limited by the presence of immunosuppressive cells that accumulate in the tumor microenvironment.
Select clinical trials utilizing various cancer vaccine strategies.
| Number | Phase | Cancer Type | Vaccine | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00089856 | III | Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Allogeneic prostate cancer cells overexpressing GM-CSF (GVAX) | Terminated (<30% chance of meeting primary endpoint) | [ |
| NCT01836432 | III | Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cells expressing aGT (Algenpantucel-L) | No improvement in overall survival | [ |
| NCT00676507 | III | Advanced NSCLC | Allogeneic NSCLC cells with reduced TGFβ2 expression (belagenpumatucel-L) | Terminated without meeting the survival endpoint | [ |
| NCT00796445 | III | Melanoma | Recombinant MAGE-A3 and AS15 | Terminated early for the lack of efficacy | [ |
| NCT00409188 | III | Stage III NSCLC | Lipopeptide with MUC1 peptide sequence (Tecemotide) | Clinically relevant prolonged overall survival | [ |
| NCT00683670 | I | Advanced melanoma | Autologous dendritic cells loaded with patient-specific neoantigens | Diverse neoantigen-specific T cell receptor repertoire | [ |
| NCT01970358 | I | Advanced melanoma | Twenty predicted personal tumor neoantigens | Induction of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells targeting neoantigens | [ |
| NCT02035956 | I | Advanced melanoma | Poly-neoepitopic coding RNA of an individual patient | T cell responses against multiple vaccine neoepitopes | [ |
| NCT02149225 | I | Newly diagnosed glioblastoma | Unmutated antigen library | Sustained CD8+ and CD4+ T cell responses | 110 |
| NCT01896869 | II | Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer | GM-CSF-secreting allogeneic pancreatic tumor cells and ipilimumab | No improvement in overall survival | [ |
| NCT01832870 | I | metastatic | Autologous dendritic cells loaded with PA2024 (Sipuleucel-T) and ipilimumab | Increase in tumor-specific antibodies | [ |
| NCT01322490 | III | Metastatic prostate cancer | Poxviruses expressing PSA and costimulatory molecules (PROSTVAC) | No effect on alive without events and overall survival | [ |
| NCT00113984 | I | Metastatic prostate cancer | PROSTVAC and ipilimumab | Enhancement in co-stimulation of the immune system | [ |
| NCT01302496 | II | Advanced melanoma | Autologous dendritic cells electroporated with synthetic mRNA and ipilimumab | Highly durable tumor responses | [ |
| NCT00094653 | III | Metastatic melanoma | Glycoprotein 100 peptide and ipilimumab | No effect in overall survival | [ |
| NCT00084656 | II | Advanced melanoma | Multipeptides (tyrosinase/gp100/MART-1) and ipilimumab | No improvement in the clinical outcomes | [ |
| NCT01176461 | I | Advanced melanoma | Multipeptides (MART-1/NY-ESO-1/gp100) and Nivolumab | No immunological responses obtained | [ |
| NCT02410733 | I | Advanced melanoma | Liposomal RNA of 4 non-mutated TAAs (NY-ESO-1/MAGE-A3/tyrosinase/TPTE) and anti-PD-1 antibody | Strong CD4+ and CD8+ T cell immunity against antigens | [ |
| NCT01976585 | I | Low-Grade Lymphoma | Flt3L, radiotherapy, and TLR3 agonist | Increase in the durable remission rates | [ |
| NCT03313778 | I | Melanoma | Lipid-encapsulated mRNA | Safe and well-tolerated | [ |
| NCT00409188 | III | NSCLC | MUC1 liposomal-based vaccine | No difference in overall sutvival | [ |