Journal of Hematology & Oncology (Jan 2025)

WT1-mRNA dendritic cell vaccination of patients with glioblastoma multiforme, malignant pleural mesothelioma, metastatic breast cancer, and other solid tumors: type 1 T-lymphocyte responses are associated with clinical outcome

  • Zwi N. Berneman,
  • Maxime De Laere,
  • Paul Germonpré,
  • Manon T. Huizing,
  • Yannick Willemen,
  • Eva Lion,
  • Hans De Reu,
  • Jolien Van den Bossche,
  • Jan Van den Brande,
  • Pol Specenier,
  • Sevilay Altintas,
  • Peter A. van Dam,
  • Nathalie Cools,
  • Griet Nijs,
  • Barbara Stein,
  • Kim Caluwaerts,
  • Annemiek Snoeckx,
  • Bart Op de Beeck,
  • Kirsten Saevels,
  • Lynn Rutsaert,
  • Irma Vandenbosch,
  • Gizem Oner,
  • Martin Lammens,
  • Pierre Van Damme,
  • Sian Llewellyn-Lacey,
  • David A. Price,
  • Yoshihiro Oka,
  • Yusuke Oji,
  • Haruo Sugiyama,
  • Marie M. Couttenye,
  • Ann L. Van de Velde,
  • Viggo F. Van Tendeloo,
  • Marc Peeters,
  • Sébastien Anguille,
  • Evelien L.J.M. Smits

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-025-01661-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Cell therapies, including tumor antigen-loaded dendritic cells used as therapeutic cancer vaccines, offer treatment options for patients with malignancies. We evaluated the feasibility, safety, immunogenicity, and clinical activity of adjuvant vaccination with Wilms’ tumor protein (WT1) mRNA-electroporated autologous dendritic cells (WT1-mRNA/DC) in a single-arm phase I/II clinical study of patients with advanced solid tumors receiving standard therapy. Disease status and immune reactivity were evaluated after 8 weeks and 6 months. WT1-mRNA/DC vaccination was feasible in all patients, except one. Vaccination was well tolerated without evidence of systemic toxicity. The disease control rate and overall response rate among a total of 39 evaluable patients were 74.4% and 12.8%, respectively. Median overall survival (OS) was 43.7 months among 13 patients with glioblastoma multiforme, 41.9 months among 12 patients with metastatic breast cancer, and 48.8 months among 10 patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma, comparing favourably with historical controls reported in the literature. OS was longer in patients with stable disease at 8 weeks and disease control at 6 months versus patients without disease control at either time point. Disease control and higher OS were associated with antigen-specific type 1 CD4+ and/or CD8+ T-lymphocyte responses, mainly induced by WT1-mRNA/DC vaccination. Antigen-nonspecific type 2 CD8+ T-cell responses were common before WT1-mRNA/DC vaccination but did not show any association with clinical outcome. Collectively, these data indicate that WT1-mRNA/DC vaccination is feasible, safe, and immunogenic and shows clinical activity in patients with advanced solid tumors, suggesting that it has the potential to help improve their survival.

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