Dendritic cell-based xenoantigen vaccination for prostate cancer immunotherapy

L Fong, D Brockstedt, C Benike, JK Breen… - The Journal of …, 2001 - journals.aai.org
L Fong, D Brockstedt, C Benike, JK Breen, G Strang, CL Ruegg, EG Engleman
The Journal of Immunology, 2001journals.aai.org
Many tumor-associated Ags represent tissue differentiation Ags that are poorly
immunogenic. Their weak immunogenicity may be due to immune tolerance to self-Ags.
Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) is just such an Ag that is expressed by both normal and
malignant prostate tissue. We have previously demonstrated that PAP can be immunogenic
in a rodent model. However, generation of prostate-specific autoimmunity was seen only
when a xenogeneic homolog of PAP was used as the immunogen. To explore the potential …
Abstract
Many tumor-associated Ags represent tissue differentiation Ags that are poorly immunogenic. Their weak immunogenicity may be due to immune tolerance to self-Ags. Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) is just such an Ag that is expressed by both normal and malignant prostate tissue. We have previously demonstrated that PAP can be immunogenic in a rodent model. However, generation of prostate-specific autoimmunity was seen only when a xenogeneic homolog of PAP was used as the immunogen. To explore the potential role of xenoantigen immunization in cancer patients, we performed a phase I clinical trial using dendritic cells pulsed with recombinant mouse PAP as a tumor vaccine. Twenty-one patients with metastatic prostate cancer received two monthly vaccinations of xenoantigen-loaded dendritic cells with minimal treatment-associated side effects. All patients developed T cell immunity to mouse PAP following immunization. Eleven of the 21 patients also developed T cell proliferative responses to the homologous self-Ag. These responses were associated with Ag-specific IFN-γ and/or TNF-α secretion, but not IL-4, consistent with induction of Th1 immunity. Finally, 6 of 21 patients had clinical stabilization of their previously progressing prostate cancer. All six of these patients developed T cell immunity to human PAP following vaccination. These results demonstrate that xenoantigen immunization can break tolerance to a self-Ag in humans, resulting in a clinically significant antitumor effect.
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