4.6 Review

Trial Watch: Peptide-based anticancer vaccines

Journal

ONCOIMMUNOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/2162402X.2014.974411

Keywords

carbohydrate-mimetic peptides; immune checkpoint blockers; immunostimulatory cytokines; survivin; synthetic long peptides; WT1

Funding

  1. Ligue contre le Cancer
  2. Agence National de la Recherche (ANR)
  3. Association pour la recherche sur le cancer (ARC)
  4. Canceropole Ile-de-France
  5. AXA Chair for Longevity Research
  6. Institut National du Cancer (INCa)
  7. Fondation Bettencourt-Schueller
  8. Fondation de France
  9. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale (FRM)
  10. European Commission (ArtForce)
  11. European Research Council (ERC)
  12. LabEx Immuno-Oncology
  13. SIRIC Stratified Oncology Cell DNA Repair and Tumor Immune Elimination (SOCRATE)
  14. SIRIC Cancer Research and Personalized Medicine (CARPEM)
  15. Paris Alliance of Cancer Research Institutes (PACRI)

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Malignant cells express antigens that can be harnessed to elicit anticancer immune responses. One approach to achieve such goal consists in the administration of tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) or peptides thereof as recombinant proteins in the presence of adequate adjuvants. Throughout the past decade, peptide vaccines have been shown to mediate antineoplastic effects in various murine tumor models, especially when administered in the context of potent immunostimulatory regimens. In spite of multiple limitations, first of all the fact that anticancer vaccines are often employed as therapeutic (rather than prophylactic) agents, this immunotherapeutic paradigm has been intensively investigated in clinical scenarios, with promising results. Currently, both experimentalists and clinicians are focusing their efforts on the identification of so-called tumor rejection antigens, i.e., TAAs that can elicit an immune response leading to disease eradication, as well as to combinatorial immunostimulatory interventions with superior adjuvant activity in patients. Here, we summarize the latest advances in the development of peptide vaccines for cancer therapy.

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