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Small Study Finds Personalized Neoantigen Vaccines May Result in Durable Immune Response for Patients With Melanoma


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Four years after patients with melanoma were treated with a personalized cancer vaccine, the immune response caused by the vaccine remained robust and effective in keeping cancer cells under control, according to a new study published by Hu et al in Nature Medicine.

The findings demonstrate the staying power of the immune response generated by the vaccine, known as NeoVax, which works by targeting specific proteins on each patient’s tumor cells. The researchers found that, nearly 4 years after vaccination, the patients’ immune system cells were active not only against tumor cells with those distinctive proteins, but also spread to other proteins found in those patients’ tumor cells.

“These findings demonstrate that a personal neoantigen vaccine can stimulate a durable immune response in patients with melanoma,” said study co-leader Catherine J. Wu, MD, of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Broad Institute. “We found evidence that the initial, targeted immune response has broadened over the years to provide patients with continued protection from the disease.”

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Study Background, Methods

The study involved eight patients who had undergone surgery for advanced melanoma but were considered to be at high risk for disease recurrence. In a phase I clinical trial, they were treated with NeoVax a median of 18 weeks after surgery. The vaccine is made from bits of proteins, called epitopes, that poke from the cell surface and serve as signals to the immune system. The epitopes in NeoVax come from neoantigens. Because neoantigens are found only on tumor cells, they trigger an immune response that spares normal cells from attack.

To make NeoVax, the sequence of DNA in a patient’s tumor is scanned in order to identify the key epitopes within the tumor cell neoantigens. The epitopes serve as targets for T cells. When a patient is treated with NeoVax, the epitopes draw an immune system response against any melanoma cell that displays them.

Response After 4 Years

In the new study, researchers found that a median of 4 years after NeoVax treatment, all eight patients were alive, with six showing no signs of active disease. When they analyzed the patients’ T cells, they found evidence that the cells not only “remembered” their initial target epitopes, but had expanded their repertoire to recognize other melanoma-related epitopes as well.

Two of the patients whose cancer had spread to their lungs also received an immune checkpoint inhibitor. In those two patients, the researchers detected signs that T cells had made their way into the tumor tissue, where they could be most lethal to melanoma cells.

“We found evidence of everything we look for in a strong, sustained immune response,” said study co-leader Patrick A. Ott, MD, PhD, also of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Broad Institute. “T cells continued to specifically target melanoma cells and retained a memory of the epitopes they initially responded to. The T cells were activated to kill tumor cells and, critically, had diversified to target melanoma epitopes not included in the original vaccine.”

The study authors concluded, “Personal neoantigen peptide vaccines thus induce T-cell responses that persist over years and broaden the spectrum of tumor-specific cytotoxicity in patients with melanoma.”

Disclosure: For full disclosures of the study authors, visit nature.com.

The content in this post has not been reviewed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) and does not necessarily reflect the ideas and opinions of ASCO®.
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