| Literature DB >> 34960142 |
Tahseen H Nasti1, Christiane S Eberhardt1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) has substantially increased the overall survival of cancer patients and has revolutionized the therapeutic situation in oncology. However, not all patients and cancer types respond to ICI, or become resistant over time. Combining ICIs with therapeutic cancer vaccines is a promising option as vaccination may help to overcome resistance to immunotherapies while immunotherapies may increase immune responses to the particular cancer vaccine by reinvigorating exhausted T cells. Thus, it would be possible to reprogram a response with appropriate vaccines, using a particular cancer antigen and a corresponding ICI. Target populations include currently untreatable cancer patients or those who receive treatment regimens with high risk of serious side effects. In addition, with the increased use of ICI in clinical practice, questions arise regarding safety and efficacy of administration of conventional vaccines, such as influenza or COVID-19 vaccines, during active ICI treatment. This review discusses the main principles of prophylactic and therapeutic cancer vaccines, the potential impact on combining therapeutic cancer vaccines with ICI, and briefly summarizes the current knowledge of safety and effectiveness of influenza and COVID-19 vaccines in ICI-treated patients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID vaccines; cancer vaccines; influenza; preventive vaccines; therapeutic vaccines
Year: 2021 PMID: 34960142 PMCID: PMC8706349 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9121396
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Cancer vaccines and their clinical implementation. Summary of a selection of prophylactic and therapeutic vaccines in clinical trials or already in clinical use.
| Cancer | Vaccine | Description | Type | Mechanism | Stage of Development | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bladder | BCG (Bacillus Calmette–Guérin) | Autologous | Therapeutic | Internalization of BCG antigen and activation of antigen-specific CD8 and CD4 T cells; direct cytotoxicity of the tumor cells | In clinical use | Reviewed in [ |
| Brain | IDH1(R132H)-specific peptide vaccine | Allogenic (Isocitrate dehydrogenase1, gets mutated in gliomas) | Therapeutic | Specific immune response | Phase 1 | [ |
| DCVax®-L | Autologous | Therapeutic | Patient-derived dendritic cells are labeled with patient’s tumor cells and injected intradermal to induce an immune response | Phase 3 | [ | |
| Breast | Her 2 directed | Autologous or allogenic | Therapeutic | Activation of immune response | Phase 1/2 | Many Phase1/phase 2 trials reviewed in [ |
| h tert (telomerase reverse transcriptase) | Autologous or allogenic | Therapeutic | Activation of CTLs against mutations in overexpressing breast cancer cells | Reviewed in [ | ||
| Prostate | Sipuleucel-T | Autologous (patients APCs incubated with PAP and GM-CSF) | Therapeutic | T cell | In clinical use | [ |
| Colorectal | CEA (carcinoembryonic antigen) | Autologous | Therapeutic | CTL response | Preclinical, In clinical trial | [ |
| Kidney | carbonic-anhydrase IX | Allogenic/ | | Increase in IFN responses | In clinical trials | [ |
| Liver | HEPLISAV-B | Allogenic | Preventive | antibody response | In clinical use | [ |
| Lung | CIMAvax-EGF | Allogenic | Preventive | antibody | Clinical trial | [ |
| Melanoma | Neovax (personalized neoantigens) | Autologous | Preventive (after surgery) | CD4 and CD8 | Clinical trial | [ |
| Cervical | Gardasil4/9 | Allogenic | Preventive | Mainly induces neutralizing antibodies against various strains of HPV | In clinical use | [ |
Combination therapies of cancer vaccine and ICIs in clinical trials. irAE: immune-related adverse events.
| Cancer Type | Vaccine | ICI Agent | Type | Summary | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Talimogene Laherparepvec | Pembrolizumab | Phase III | Well tolerated (only grade 1 and 2 toxicities) and showed OR = 62% | [ |
|
| Talimogene Laherparepvec | Pembrolizumab | Phase 1 | irAEs > 50%, related to either GM-CSF or Pembrolizumab | [ |
|
| gp100280-288 (288 V), and NY-ESO-1157-165 (165 V). peptide vaccine | Nivolumab | Phase 1 | Well tolerated: 53% had disease progression at 2 years. Progression was associated with increased regulatory T cells and a decrease in antigen-specific CD8 T cells | [ |
|
| Talimogene Laherparepvec | Ipilimumab | Phase 1 | Well tolerated, Grade 3 and 4 irAEs: 26%. | [ |
|
| Sipuleucel-T (SIP-T) | Ipilimumab | Phase III | Adverse effects negligible. Median survival < 4 years | [ |
|
| GVAX | ipilimumab | Phase I | Well tolerated. 50% reduction in prostate-specific antigen in the combination group | [ |
|
| Gp100 peptide vaccine | Ipilimumab | Phase III | Well tolerated. Grade 3 and 4 irAEs: 10–15%. Overall survival: 10 months for combination vs. 6 months for GP100 alone. No difference between ipi and combination | [ |
|
| Neo-PV-01 (personalized neoantigens) | Nivolumab | Phase IIb | Safe, efficacious and activation of CD4 and CD8 T Cells | [ |
Summary of irAEs and immune responses after vaccinations in cancer patients undergoing ICI.
| Cancer Type | Vaccine | Patient Number | Safety | Efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lung | Influenza | Vaccinated; | irAEs 52.2% vs. 25.5% | Similar humoral response in healthy or cancer patients | [ |
| Different cancer types | Influenza | Any grade irAEs | High antibody titers, CTLs, very few patients experienced Influenza infection | [ | |
| Different cancer types | Influenza | Vaccine related adverse events: 1.5% grades 1–2 | Similar incidence of influenza-like illness, Fatality 4.3% (unvaccinated) vs. 0% (vaccinated) | [ | |
| Many types, 50% lung cancer | COVID-19 | No Vaccine related toxicities | NA | [ | |
| Different cancer types; Lung and bladder 25% each | COVID-19 | Only one patient had irAEs | Neutralizing antibody titers | [ | |
| Different types; Lung cancer 76% | COVID-19 | Fever and pain at injection site. 1 patient with grade 3 irAEs. | High seropositivity, and CD8 and CD4 responses | [ |