Samuels Sanne, Marijne Heeren A, Zijlmans Henry J M A A, Welters Marij J P, van den Berg Joost H, Philips Daisy, Kvistborg Pia, Ehsan Ilina, Scholl Suzy M E, Nuijen Bastiaan, Schumacher Ton N M, van Beurden Marc, Jordanova Ekaterina S, Haanen John B A G, van der Burg Sjoerd H, Kenter Gemma G
Department of Gynecology, Center for Gynecologic Oncology Amsterdam, P.O. Box 90203, 1006 BE, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Medical Oncology, VU University Medical Center-Cancer Center Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1117, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2017 Sep;66(9):1163-1173. doi: 10.1007/s00262-017-2006-y. Epub 2017 Apr 27.
Usual type vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (uVIN) is caused by HPV, predominantly type 16. Several forms of HPV immunotherapy have been studied, however, clinical results could be improved. A novel intradermal administration route, termed DNA tattooing, is superior in animal models, and was tested for the first time in humans with a HPV16 E7 DNA vaccine (TTFC-E7SH).
The trial was designed to test safety, immunogenicity, and clinical response of TTFC-E7SH in twelve HPV16 uVIN patients. Patients received six vaccinations via DNA tattooing. The first six patients received 0.2 mg TTFC-E7SH and the next six 2 mg TTFC-E7SH. Vaccine-specific T-cell immunity was evaluated by IFNγ-ELISPOT and multiparametric flow cytometry.
Only grade I-II adverse events were observed upon TTFC-E7SH vaccination. The ELISPOT analysis showed in 4/12 patients a response to the peptide pool containing shuffled E7 peptides. Multiparametric flow cytometry showed low CD4 and/or CD8 T-cell responses as measured by increased expression of PD-1 (4/12 in both), CTLA-4 (2/12 and 3/12), CD107a (5/12 and 4/12), or the production of IFNγ (2/12 and 1/12), IL-2 (3/12 and 4/12), TNFα (2/12 and 1/12), and MIP1β (3/12 and 6/12). At 3 months follow-up, no clinical response was observed in any of the twelve vaccinated patients.
DNA tattoo vaccination was shown to be safe. A low vaccine-induced immune response and no clinical response were observed in uVIN patients after TTFC-E7SH DNA tattoo vaccination. Therefore, a new phase I/II trial with an improved DNA vaccine format is currently in development for patients with uVIN.
寻常型外阴上皮内瘤变(uVIN)由人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)引起,主要是16型。已经研究了几种形式的HPV免疫疗法,然而,临床结果仍有待改善。一种名为DNA纹身的新型皮内给药途径在动物模型中表现更优,并且首次使用HPV16 E7 DNA疫苗(TTFC-E7SH)在人体中进行了测试。
该试验旨在测试TTFC-E7SH在12例HPV16 uVIN患者中的安全性、免疫原性和临床反应。患者通过DNA纹身接受6次疫苗接种。前6例患者接受0.2mg TTFC-E7SH,后6例接受2mg TTFC-E7SH。通过IFNγ-ELISPOT和多参数流式细胞术评估疫苗特异性T细胞免疫。
TTFC-E7SH疫苗接种后仅观察到I-II级不良事件。ELISPOT分析显示,12例患者中有4例对含有混合E7肽的肽库有反应。多参数流式细胞术显示,通过PD-1(两者均为4/12)、CTLA-4(2/12和3/12)、CD107a(5/12和4/12)表达增加或IFNγ(2/12和1/12)、IL-2(3/12和4/12)、TNFα(2/12和1/12)以及MIP1β(3/12和6/12)的产生来衡量,CD4和/或CD8 T细胞反应较低。在3个月的随访中,12例接种疫苗的患者均未观察到临床反应。
DNA纹身疫苗接种被证明是安全的。TTFC-E7SH DNA纹身疫苗接种后,uVIN患者中观察到低疫苗诱导的免疫反应且无临床反应。因此,目前正在为uVIN患者开展一项采用改进型DNA疫苗形式的新的I/II期试验。