4.3 Article

Using lymph node swelling as a potential biomarker for successful vaccination

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 24, Pages 35655-35669

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.9580

Keywords

magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); cancer; vaccines; biomarker; emulsion; Immunology and Microbiology Section; Immune response; Immunity

Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. MITACS
  3. National Research Council
  4. Radiology Research Foundation
  5. NSERC Discovery program

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There is currently a lack of biomarkers to help properly assess novel immunotherapies at both the preclinical and clinical stages of development. Recent work done by our group indicated significant volume changes in the vaccine draining right lymph node (RLN) volumes of mice that had been vaccinated with DepoVax (TM), a lipid-based vaccine platform that was developed to enhance the potency of peptide-based vaccines. These changes in lymph node (LN) volume were unique to vaccinated mice. To better assess the potential of volumetric LN markers for multiple vaccination platforms, we evaluated 100 tumor bearing mice and assessed their response to vaccination with either a DepoVax based vaccine (DPX) or a water-in-oil emulsion (w/o), and compared them to untreated controls. MRI was used to longitudinally monitor LN and tumor volumes weekly over 4 weeks. We then evaluated changes in LN volumes occurring in response to therapy as a potential predictive biomarker for treatment success. We found that for both vaccine types, DPX and w/o, the % RLN volumetric increase over baseline and the ratio of RLN/LLN were strong predictors of successful tumor suppression (LLN is left inguinal LN). The area under the curve (AUC) was greatest, between 0.75-0.85, two (% RLN) or three (RLN/LLN) weeks post-vaccination. For optimized critical thresholds we found these biomarkers consistently had sensitivity > 90% and specificity > 70% indicating strong prognostic potential. Vaccination with DepoVax had a more pronounced effect on draining lymph nodes than w/o emulsion vaccines, which correlated with a higher anti-tumor activity in DPX-treated mice.

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