Cancers (Jul 2023)

Clinical Trial on the Safety and Tolerability of Personalized Cancer Vaccines Using Human Platelet Lysate-Induced Antigen-Presenting Cells

  • Terutsugu Koya,
  • Kenichi Yoshida,
  • Misa Togi,
  • Yo Niida,
  • Sumihito Togi,
  • Hiroki Ura,
  • Shuichi Mizuta,
  • Tomohisa Kato,
  • Sohsuke Yamada,
  • Takeo Shibata,
  • Yi-Chang Liu,
  • Shyng-Shiou Yuan,
  • Deng-Chyang Wu,
  • Hirohito Kobayashi,
  • Taiju Utsugisawa,
  • Hitoshi Kanno,
  • Shigetaka Shimodaira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15143627
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 14
p. 3627

Abstract

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Research and development of personalized cancer vaccines as precision medicine are ongoing. We predicted human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-compatible cancer antigen candidate peptides based on patient-specific cancer genomic profiles and performed a Phase I clinical trial for the safety and tolerability of cancer vaccines with human platelet lysate-induced antigen-presenting cells (HPL-APCs) from peripheral monocytes. Among the five enrolled patients, two patients completed six doses per course (2–3 × 107 cells per dose), and an interim analysis was performed based on the immune response. An immune response was detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISpot) assays to HLA-A*33:03-matched KRASWT, HLA-DRB1*09:01-compliant KRASWT or G12D, or HLA-A*31:01-matched SMAD4WT, and HLA-DRB1*04:01-matched SMAD4G365D peptides in two completed cases, respectively. Moreover, SMAD4WT-specific CD8+ effector memory T cells were amplified. However, an attenuation of the acquired immune response was observed 6 months after one course of cancer vaccination as the disease progressed. This study confirmed the safety and tolerability of HPL-APCs in advanced and recurrent cancers refractory to standard therapy and is the first clinical report to demonstrate the immunoinducibility of personalized cancer vaccines using HPL-APCs. Phase II clinical trials to determine immune responses with optimized adjuvant drugs and continued administration are expected to demonstrate efficacy.

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