Vaccination of melanoma patients with peptide- or tumorlysate-pulsed dendritic cells
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Medicine
- Vol. 4 (3), 328-332
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0398-328
Abstract
Melanoma is the main cause of death in patients with skin cancer1. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) attack melanoma cells in an HLA-restricted and tumor antigen-specific manner. Several melanoma-associated tumor antigens have been identified2. These antigens are suitable candidates for a vaccination therapy of melanoma. Dendritic cells (DCs) are antigen-presenting cells (APCs) specialized for the induction of a primary T-cell response3. Mouse studies have demonstrated the potent capacity of DCs to induce antitu-mor immunity4–11. In the present clinical pilot study, DCs were generated in the presence of granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interleukin 4 (IL-4) and were pulsed with tumor lysate or a cocktail of peptides known to be recognized by CTLs, depending on the patient's HLA haplotype. Keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) was added as a CD4 helper antigen and immunological tracer molecule. Sixteen patients with advanced melanoma were immunized on an outpatient basis. Vaccination was well tolerated. No physical sign of autoimmunity was detected in any of the patients. DC vaccination induced de-layed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactivity toward KLH in all patients, as well as a positive DTH reaction to peptide-pulsed DCs in 11 patients. Recruitment of peptide-specific CTLs to the DTH challenge site was also demonstrated. Therefore, antigen-specific immunity was induced during DC vaccination. Objective responses were evident in 5 out of 16 evaluated patients (two complete responses, three partial responses) with regression of metastases in various organs (skin, soft tissue, lung, pancreas) and one additional minor response. These data indicate that vaccination with autologous DCs generated from peripheral blood is a safe and promising approach in the treatment of metastatic melanoma. Further studies are necessary to demonstrate clinical effectiveness and impact on the survival of melanoma patients.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dendritic cells: from ontogenetic orphans to myelomonocytic descendantsImmunology Today, 1996
- ON IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORYAnnual Review of Immunology, 1996
- Therapy of murine tumors with p53 wild-type and mutant sequence peptide-based vaccines.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Therapy of murine tumors with tumor peptide-pulsed dendritic cells: dependence on T cells, B7 costimulation, and T helper cell 1-associated cytokines.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Murine dendritic cells loaded in vitro with soluble protein prime cytotoxic T lymphocytes against tumor antigen in vivo.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Peptide-pulsed dendritic cells induce antigen-specific CTL-mediated protective tumor immunity.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Dendritic cells as initiators of tumor immune responses: a possible strategy for tumor immunotherapy?Immunology Today, 1995
- Efficient presentation of soluble antigen by cultured human dendritic cells is maintained by granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor plus interleukin 4 and downregulated by tumor necrosis factor alpha.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1994
- GM-CSF and TNF-α cooperate in the generation of dendritic Langerhans cellsNature, 1992
- The Dendritic Cell System and its Role in ImmunogenicityAnnual Review of Immunology, 1991