Trial Watch Peptide vaccines in cancer therapy

被引:103
作者
Aranda, Fernando [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Vacchelli, Erika [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Eggermont, Alexander
Galon, Jerome [4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ]
Sautes-Fridman, Catherine [5 ,6 ,8 ]
Tartour, Eric [9 ,10 ]
Zitvogel, Laurence [11 ]
Kroemer, Guido [1 ,3 ,4 ,9 ]
Galluzzi, Lorenzo [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] INSERM, U848, Villejuif, France
[2] Univ Paris 11, Le Kremlin Bicetre, France
[3] Ctr Rech Cordeliers, Equipe Labellisee Ligue Natl Canc 11, Paris, France
[4] Univ Paris 05, Sorbonne Paris Cite, Paris, France
[5] Univ Paris 06, Paris, France
[6] INSERM, U872, Paris, France
[7] Ctr Rech Cordeliers, Equipe 15, Paris, France
[8] Ctr Rech Cordeliers, Equipe 13, Paris, France
[9] Hop Europeen Georges Pompidou, AP HP, Pole Biol, Paris, France
[10] INSERM, U970, Paris, France
[11] INSERM, U1015, CICBT507, Villejuif, France
来源
ONCOIMMUNOLOGY | 2013年 / 2卷 / 12期
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
adjuvants; dendritic cells; ipilimumab; NY-ESO-1; survivin; TLR agonists; T-CELL RESPONSES; FACTOR RECEPTOR 1; PHASE-I TRIAL; TUMOR-ASSOCIATED ANTIGEN; DENDRITIC CELLS; CLINICAL-TRIAL; MALIGNANT-MELANOMA; BREAST-CANCER; HEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMA; PANCREATIC-CANCER;
D O I
10.4161/onci.26621
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Throughout the past 3 decades, along with the recognition that the immune system not only influences oncogenesis and tumor progression, but also determines how established neoplastic lesions respond therapy, renovated enthusiasm has gathered around the possibility of using vaccines as anticancer agents. Such an enthusiasm quickly tempered when it became clear that anticancer vaccines would have to be devised as therapeutic, rather than prophylactic, measures, and that malignant cells often fail to elicit (or actively suppress) innate and adaptive immune responses. Nonetheless, accumulating evidence indicates that a variety of anticancer vaccines, including cell-based, DNA-based, and purified component-based preparations, are capable of circumventing the poorly immunogenic and highly immunosuppressive nature of most tumors and elicit (at least under some circumstances) therapeutically relevant immune responses. Great efforts are currently being devoted to the identification of strategies that may provide anticancer vaccines with the capacity of breaking immunological tolerance and eliciting tumor-associated antigen-specific immunity in a majority of patients. In this sense, promising results have been obtained by combining anticancer vaccines with a relatively varied panels of adjuvants, including multiple immunostimulatory cytokines, Toll-like receptor agonists as well as inhibitors of immune checkpoints. One year ago, in the December issue of OncoImmunology, we discussed the biological mechanisms that underlie the antineoplastic effects of peptide-based vaccines and presented an abundant literature demonstrating the prominent clinical potential of such an approach. Here, we review the latest developments in this exciting area of research, focusing on high-profile studies that have been published during the last 13 mo and clinical trials launched in the same period to evaluate purified peptides or full-length proteins as therapeutic anticancer agents.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 11
页数:11
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