ϟ
 
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.23886
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Chemotherapy enhances vaccine‐induced antitumor immunity in melanoma patients

Paola Nisticò,Imerio Capone,Belinda Palermo,Duilia Del Bello,Virginia Ferraresi,Federica Moschella,Eleonora Aricó,Mara Valentini,Laura Bracci,Francesco Cognetti,Mariangela Ciccarese,Giuseppe Vercillo,Mario Roselli,Emanuela Fossile,Maria Elena Tosti,Ena Wang,Francesco M. Marincola,Luisa Imberti,Caterina Catricalà,Pier Giorgio Natali,Filippo Belardelli,Enrico Proietti

Medicine
Dacarbazine
Immune system
2008
Combination of chemotherapy with cancer vaccines is currently regarded as a potentially valuable therapeutic approach for the treatment of some metastatic tumors, but optimal modalities remain unknown. We designed a phase I/II pilot study for evaluating the effects of dacarbazine (DTIC) on the immune response in HLA-A2(+) disease-free melanoma patients who received anticancer vaccination 1 day following chemotherapy (800 mg/mq i.v.). The vaccine, consisting of a combination of HLA-A2 restricted melanoma antigen A (Melan-A/MART-1) and gp100 analog peptides (250 microg each, i.d.), was administered in combination or not with DTIC to 2 patient groups. The combined treatment is nontoxic. The comparative immune monitoring demonstrates that patients receiving DTIC 1 day before the vaccination have a significantly improved long-lasting memory CD8(+) T cell response. Of relevance, these CD8(+) T cells recognize and lyse HLA-A2(+)/Melan-A(+) tumor cell lines. Global transcriptional analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) revealed a DTIC-induced activation of genes involved in cytokine production, leukocyte activation, immune response and cell motility that can favorably condition tumor antigen-specific CD8(+) T cell responses. This study represents a proof in humans of a chemotherapy-induced enhancement of CD8(+) memory T cell response to cancer vaccines, which opens new opportunities to design novel effective combined therapies improving cancer vaccination effectiveness.
Loading...
    Cite this:
Generate Citation
Powered by Citationsy*
    Chemotherapy enhances vaccine‐induced antitumor immunity in melanoma patients” is a paper by Paola Nisticò Imerio Capone Belinda Palermo Duilia Del Bello Virginia Ferraresi Federica Moschella Eleonora Aricó Mara Valentini Laura Bracci Francesco Cognetti Mariangela Ciccarese Giuseppe Vercillo Mario Roselli Emanuela Fossile Maria Elena Tosti Ena Wang Francesco M. Marincola Luisa Imberti Caterina Catricalà Pier Giorgio Natali Filippo Belardelli Enrico Proietti published in 2008. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.