Department of Clinical Studies, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Department of Pathobiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Department of Clinical Studies, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Clin Cancer Res. 2016 Sep 1;22(17):4380-90. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-16-0088. Epub 2016 Mar 18.
Recombinant Listeria vaccines induce tumor-specific T-cell responses that eliminate established tumors and prevent metastatic disease in murine cancer models. We used dogs with HER2/neu(+) appendicular osteosarcoma, a well-recognized spontaneous model for pediatric osteosarcoma, to determine whether a highly attenuated, recombinant Listeria monocytogenes expressing a chimeric human HER2/neu fusion protein (ADXS31-164) could safely induce HER2/neu-specific immunity and prevent metastatic disease.
Eighteen dogs that underwent limb amputation or salvage surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy were enrolled in a phase I dose escalation clinical trial and received either 2 × 10(8), 5 × 10(8), 1 × 10(9), or 3.3 × 10(9) CFU of ADXS31-164 intravenously every 3 weeks for 3 administrations.
Only low-grade, transient toxicities were observed. ADXS31-164 broke peripheral tolerance and induced antigen-specific IFNγ responses against the intracellular domain of HER2/neu in 15 of 18 dogs within 6 months of treatment. Furthermore, ADXS31-164 reduced the incidence of metastatic disease and significantly increased duration of survival time and 1-, 2-, and 3-year survival rates when compared with a historical control group with HER2/neu(+) appendicular osteosarcoma treated with amputation and chemotherapy alone.
These findings demonstrate that ADXS31-164 administered in the setting of minimal residual disease can induce HER2/neu-specific immunity and may reduce the incidence of metastatic disease and prolong overall survival in a clinically relevant, spontaneous, large animal model of cancer. These findings, therefore, have important translational relevance for children with osteosarcoma and adults with other HER2/neu(+) cancers. Clin Cancer Res; 22(17); 4380-90. ©2016 AACR.
重组李斯特菌疫苗可诱导肿瘤特异性 T 细胞反应,从而消除鼠类癌症模型中的已建立肿瘤并预防转移性疾病。我们利用 HER2/neu(+)附肢骨肉瘤犬,一种公认的小儿骨肉瘤自发模型,来确定是否可以使用高减毒、表达嵌合人 HER2/neu 融合蛋白的重组李斯特菌单胞菌(ADXS31-164)安全地诱导 HER2/neu 特异性免疫并预防转移性疾病。
18 只接受过肢体截肢或挽救性手术和辅助化疗的狗参加了 I 期剂量递增临床试验,并接受了 2×10(8)、5×10(8)、1×10(9)或 3.3×10(9)CFU 的 ADXS31-164 静脉内每 3 周一次,共 3 次。
仅观察到低级别、短暂的毒性。在治疗后 6 个月内,ADXS31-164 打破外周耐受,并在 18 只狗中的 15 只中诱导针对 HER2/neu 细胞内结构域的抗原特异性 IFNγ 反应。此外,与仅接受截肢和化疗治疗的 HER2/neu(+)附肢骨肉瘤的历史对照组相比,ADXS31-164 降低了转移性疾病的发生率,并显著增加了生存时间和 1 年、2 年和 3 年的生存率。
这些发现表明,在最小残留疾病的背景下给予 ADXS31-164 可以诱导 HER2/neu 特异性免疫,并可能降低转移性疾病的发生率并延长骨肉瘤患儿和其他 HER2/neu(+)癌症成人的总生存期。因此,这些发现对于骨肉瘤患儿和其他 HER2/neu(+)癌症成人具有重要的转化相关性。临床癌症研究;22(17);4380-90。©2016AACR。