4.7 Article

Chemotherapy enhances vaccine-induced antitumor immunity in melanoma patients

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 124, Issue 1, Pages 130-139

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.23886

Keywords

chemoimmunotherapy; dacarbazine; human melanoma; peptide vaccination

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Funding

  1. ISS-NIH
  2. collaboration program 2004-6
  3. Italian Ministry of Health Ricerca Finalizzata 2002 [Fasc.3AO/F]
  4. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC)
  5. CLINICAL CENTER [ZIACL002118, Z01CL002115, Z01CL002118] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Combination of chemotherapy with cancer vaccines is currently regarded as a potentially valuable therapeutic approach for the treatment of some metastatic tumors, but optimal modalities remain unknown. We designed a phase I/II pilot study for evaluating the effects of dacarbazine (DTIC) on the immune response in HLA-A2(+) disease-free melanoma patients who received anticancer vaccination 1 day following chemotherapy (800 mg/mq i.v.). The vaccine, consisting of a combination of HLA-A2 restricted melanoma antigen A (Melan-A/MART-1) and gp100 analog peptides (250 mu g each, i.d.), was administered in combination or not with DTIC to 2 patient groups. The combined treatment is nontoxic. The comparative immune monitoring demonstrates that patients receiving DTIC 1 day before the vaccination have a significantly improved long-lasting memory CD8(+) T cell response. Of relevance, these CD8(+) T cells recognize and lyse HLA-A2(+)/Melan-A(+) tumor cell lines. Global transcriptional analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) revealed a DTIC-induced activation of genes involved in cytokine production, leukocyte activation, immune response and cell motility that can favorably condition tumor antigen-specific CD8(+) T cell responses. This study represents a proof in humans of a chemotherapy-induced enhancement of CD8(+) memory T cell response to cancer vaccines, which opens new opportunities to design novel effective combined therapies improving cancer vaccination effectiveness. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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