» Articles » PMID: 23264902

Trial Watch: Peptide Vaccines in Cancer Therapy

Overview
Journal Oncoimmunology
Date 2012 Dec 25
PMID 23264902
Citations 49
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Prophylactic vaccination constitutes one of the most prominent medical achievements of history. This concept was first demonstrated by the pioneer work of Edward Jenner, dating back to the late 1790s, after which an array of preparations that confer life-long protective immunity against several infectious agents has been developed. The ensuing implementation of nation-wide vaccination programs has de facto abated the incidence of dreadful diseases including rabies, typhoid, cholera and many others. Among all, the most impressive result of vaccination campaigns is surely represented by the eradication of natural smallpox infection, which was definitively certified by the WHO in 1980. The idea of employing vaccines as anticancer interventions was first theorized in the 1890s by Paul Ehrlich and William Coley. However, it soon became clear that while vaccination could be efficiently employed as a preventive measure against infectious agents, anticancer vaccines would have to (1) operate as therapeutic, rather than preventive, interventions (at least in the vast majority of settings), and (2) circumvent the fact that tumor cells often fail to elicit immune responses. During the past 30 y, along with the recognition that the immune system is not irresponsive to tumors (as it was initially thought) and that malignant cells express tumor-associated antigens whereby they can be discriminated from normal cells, considerable efforts have been dedicated to the development of anticancer vaccines. Some of these approaches, encompassing cell-based, DNA-based and purified component-based preparations, have already been shown to exert conspicuous anticancer effects in cohorts of patients affected by both hematological and solid malignancies. In this Trial Watch, we will summarize the results of recent clinical trials that have evaluated/are evaluating purified peptides or full-length proteins as therapeutic interventions against cancer.

Citing Articles

Digital Pathology for Better Clinical Practice.

Hijazi A, Bifulco C, Baldin P, Galon J Cancers (Basel). 2024; 16(9).

PMID: 38730638 PMC: 11083211. DOI: 10.3390/cancers16091686.


Principles of risk assessment in colon cancer: immunity is key.

Hijazi A, Galon J Oncoimmunology. 2024; 13(1):2347441.

PMID: 38694625 PMC: 11062361. DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2024.2347441.


Light on life: immunoscore immune-checkpoint, a predictor of immunotherapy response.

Hijazi A, Antoniotti C, Cremolini C, Galon J Oncoimmunology. 2023; 12(1):2243169.

PMID: 37554310 PMC: 10405746. DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2023.2243169.


Multicenter International Study of the Consensus Immunoscore for the Prediction of Relapse and Survival in Early-Stage Colon Cancer.

Mlecnik B, Lugli A, Bindea G, Marliot F, Bifulco C, Lee J Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(2).

PMID: 36672367 PMC: 9856473. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15020418.


Personalized neoantigen vaccine combined with PD-1 blockade increases CD8 tissue-resident memory T-cell infiltration in preclinical hepatocellular carcinoma models.

Chen H, Li Z, Qiu L, Dong X, Chen G, Shi Y J Immunother Cancer. 2022; 10(9).

PMID: 36113894 PMC: 9486396. DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-004389.


References
1.
Busse A, Letsch A, Scheibenbogen C, Nonnenmacher A, Ochsenreither S, Thiel E . Mutation or loss of Wilms' tumor gene 1 (WT1) are not major reasons for immune escape in patients with AML receiving WT1 peptide vaccination. J Transl Med. 2010; 8:5. PMC: 2844374. DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-8-5. View

2.
Scheibenbogen C, Schmittel A, Keilholz U, Allgauer T, Hofmann U, Max R . Phase 2 trial of vaccination with tyrosinase peptides and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in patients with metastatic melanoma. J Immunother. 2000; 23(2):275-81. DOI: 10.1097/00002371-200003000-00012. View

3.
Pere H, Montier Y, Bayry J, Quintin-Colonna F, Merillon N, Dransart E . A CCR4 antagonist combined with vaccines induces antigen-specific CD8+ T cells and tumor immunity against self antigens. Blood. 2011; 118(18):4853-62. DOI: 10.1182/blood-2011-01-329656. View

4.
Rosenberg S, Yang J, Topalian S, Schwartzentruber D, Weber J, Parkinson D . Treatment of 283 consecutive patients with metastatic melanoma or renal cell cancer using high-dose bolus interleukin 2. JAMA. 1994; 271(12):907-13. View

5.
Salazar L, Fikes J, Southwood S, Ishioka G, Knutson K, Gooley T . Immunization of cancer patients with HER-2/neu-derived peptides demonstrating high-affinity binding to multiple class II alleles. Clin Cancer Res. 2003; 9(15):5559-65. View