Cancers (Feb 2023)

Adjuvant Vaccination with Allogenic Dendritic Cells Significantly Prolongs Overall Survival in High-Grade Gliomas: Results of a Phase II Trial

  • Guilherme Lepski,
  • Patricia C. Bergami-Santos,
  • Mariana P. Pinho,
  • Nadia E. Chauca-Torres,
  • Gabriela C. M. Evangelista,
  • Sarah F. Teixeira,
  • Elizabeth Flatow,
  • Jaqueline V. de Oliveira,
  • Carla Fogolin,
  • Nataly Peres,
  • Analía Arévalo,
  • Venâncio A. F. Alves,
  • José A. M. Barbuto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15041239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. 1239

Abstract

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Immunotherapy for cancer treatment has gained increased attention in recent years. Recently, our group reported the case of a patient with glioblastoma who underwent vaccination based on dendritic cells and experienced a strong Th1 immune response together with near-complete tumor remission. Here we report the results of a phase I/II prospective, non-controlled clinical trial with 37 patients harboring glioblastoma or grade 4 astrocytomas. At the time of first recurrence after surgery, patients began receiving monthly intradermal injections of allogenic DC-autologous tumor cell hybridomas. Overall survival, quality of life, and immunological profiles were assessed prospectively. Compared with patients in the Genomic Data Commons data bank, overall survival for vaccinated patients with glioblastoma was 27.6 ± 2.4 months (vs. 16.3 ± 0.7, log-rank p p p p < 0.01). Furthermore, seven vaccinated patients (two IDH-1-mutated and five wild type) remain alive at the time of this report (overall survival 47.9 months, SD 21.1, range: 25.4–78.6 months since diagnosis; and 34.2 months since recurrence, range: 17.8 to 40.7, SD 21.3). We believe that the data reported here can foster the improvement of treatment protocols for high-grade gliomas based on cellular immunotherapy.

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