Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Oncology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Front Immunol. 2019 Aug 8;10:1832. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01832. eCollection 2019.
Despite the promising therapeutic effects of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB), most patients with solid tumors treated with anti-PD-1/PD-L1 monotherapy do not achieve objective responses, with most tumor regressions being partial rather than complete. It is hypothesized that the absence of pre-existing antitumor immunity and/or the presence of additional tumor immune suppressive factors at the tumor microenvironment are responsible for such therapeutic failures. It is therefore clear that in order to fully exploit the potential of PD-1 blockade therapy, antitumor immune response should be amplified, while tumor immune suppression should be further attenuated. Cancer vaccines may prime patients for treatments with ICB by inducing effective anti-tumor immunity, especially in patients lacking tumor-infiltrating T-cells. These "non-inflamed" non-permissive tumors that are resistant to ICB could be rendered sensitive and transformed into "inflamed" tumor by vaccination. In this article we describe a clinical study where we use pancreatic cancer as a model, and we hypothesize that effective vaccination in pancreatic cancer patients, along with interventions that can reprogram important immunosuppressive factors in the tumor microenvironment, can enhance tumor immune recognition, thus enhancing response to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade. We incorporate into the schedule of standard of care (SOC) chemotherapy adjuvant setting a vaccine platform comprised of autologous dendritic cells loaded with personalized neoantigen peptides (PEP-DC) identified through our own proteo-genomics antigen discovery pipeline. Furthermore, we add nivolumab, an antibody against PD-1, to boost and maintain the vaccine's effect. We also demonstrate the feasibility of identifying personalized neoantigens in three pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patients, and we describe their optimal incorporation into long peptides for manufacturing into vaccine products. We finally discuss the advantages as well as the scientific and logistic challenges of such an exploratory vaccine clinical trial, and we highlight its novelty.
尽管免疫检查点阻断(ICB)具有有前景的治疗效果,但大多数接受抗 PD-1/PD-L1 单药治疗的实体瘤患者并未获得客观反应,大多数肿瘤消退为部分而非完全消退。据推测,肿瘤微环境中缺乏预先存在的抗肿瘤免疫和/或存在额外的肿瘤免疫抑制因素是导致这种治疗失败的原因。因此,为了充分发挥 PD-1 阻断治疗的潜力,应该增强抗肿瘤免疫反应,同时进一步减弱肿瘤免疫抑制。癌症疫苗可以通过诱导有效的抗肿瘤免疫来为患者接受 ICB 治疗做好准备,特别是在缺乏肿瘤浸润性 T 细胞的患者中。这些对 ICB 有抵抗力的“非炎症”非许可性肿瘤可以通过疫苗接种变得敏感,并转化为“炎症”肿瘤。在本文中,我们描述了一项临床研究,我们使用胰腺癌作为模型,并假设在胰腺癌患者中进行有效的疫苗接种,以及可以重新编程肿瘤微环境中重要免疫抑制因素的干预措施,可以增强肿瘤免疫识别,从而增强对 PD-1/PD-L1 阻断的反应。我们将包含个体化新抗原肽(PEP-DC)负载的自体树突状细胞的疫苗平台纳入标准治疗(SOC)化疗辅助方案中,这些新抗原肽是通过我们自己的蛋白质基因组抗原发现管道识别的。此外,我们添加了 nivolumab,一种针对 PD-1 的抗体,以增强和维持疫苗的效果。我们还证明了在三名胰腺导管腺癌(PDAC)患者中鉴定个体化新抗原的可行性,并描述了它们在制造疫苗产品时优化纳入长肽的情况。最后,我们讨论了这种探索性疫苗临床试验的优势以及科学和后勤挑战,并强调了其新颖性。