Vaccines (Oct 2021)

Case Report: Marked Survival Advantage of Two Colorectal Cancer Patients with Liver Metastases Treated with Vigil and FOLFOX-6

  • Vedin Barve,
  • Ned Adams,
  • Laura Stanbery,
  • Luisa Manning,
  • Staci Horvath,
  • Gladice Wallraven,
  • Ernest Bognar,
  • Minal Barve,
  • John Nemunaitis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9101201
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 1201

Abstract

Read online

Colorectal cancer is the third most diagnosed cancer in the United States. Five-year survival rates remain low and many patients will develop liver metastasis. Vigil is an immunotherapy manufactured from autologous tumor cells and transfected ex vivo with a plasmid that encodes the GM-CSF gene and bifunctional shRNA construct to knockdown furin. Here, we report two patients with colorectal cancer and resectable liver metastasis entered into a clinical trial involving Vigil in combination with standard of care modified FOLFOX-6 chemotherapy. The first dose of Vigil was given two weeks before the modified FOLFOX-6 regimen. Vigil treatment continued until Vigil supply was exhausted. Both patients exhibited remarkable response to combination therapy, demonstrating no evidence of disease recurrence for over eight years. Additionally, both patients demonstrated systemic immune response to Vigil therapy as tested by ELISPOT.

Keywords