3.8 Article

Allogeneic retrovirally transduced, IL-2- and IFN-γ-secreting cancer cell vaccine in patients with hormone refractory prostate cancer -: a phase I clinical trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENE MEDICINE
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages 547-560

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jgm.1051

Keywords

prostate cancer; gene therapy; cancer immunotherapy; tumor cell vaccine; IL-2; IFN-gamma

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Background The purpose of this vaccine study was to determine the safety and feasibility of vaccination with an allogeneic prostate carcinoma cell line, LNCaP, ex binant interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interferon-gamma. pressing recom (IFN-gamma) and to evaluate the efficacy of inducing tumor-specific immune responses in HLA-A2-matched patients with hormone refractory prostate cancer (HRPC. Methods in a dose-escalating phase I study, HLA-A2-matched HRPC patients received four vaccinations of irradiated allogeneic LNCaP cells retrovirally transduced to secrete IL-2 and IFN-gamma at study day 1, 15, 29 and 92 and subsequently every 91 days unless tumor progression was evident. Results Three patients receiving the first dose level (7.5 million cells) showed no evidence of dose-limiting toxicity or vaccine-related adverse events including autoimmunity. One of three patients receiving the second dose level (15 million cells) developed a transient self-limiting grade 3 local injection site reaction (ulceration) after the eighth vaccination. Vaccine-induced immune responses against a broad array of prostate tumor associated antigens were detected in all six patients. Two of the three patients receiving the higher dose showed a decline in serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) values of more than 50%, with one patient remaining on protocol for 3 years. Conclusions Immunisation with the allogeneic LNCaP/IL-2/IFN-gamma vaccine is safe and feasible without any dose-limiting toxicity or autoimmunity. A 50% PSA decline was achieved in two of the six patients. This encouraging data provides the scientific rationale for further investigation of the vaccine in a phase 11 trial. Copyright (C) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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