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Vaccination of prostatectomized prostate cancer patients in biochemical relapse, with autologous dendritic cells pulsed with recombinant human PSA.

Authors :
Barrou B
Benoît G
Ouldkaci M
Cussenot O
Salcedo M
Agrawal S
Massicard S
Bercovici N
Ericson ML
Thiounn N
Source :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII [Cancer Immunol Immunother] 2004 May; Vol. 53 (5), pp. 453-60. Date of Electronic Publication: 2004 Feb 04.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

This study was conducted in prostate cancer patients in biochemical relapse after radical prostatectomy, to assess the feasibility, safety, and immunogenicity of therapeutic vaccination with autologous dendritic cells (DCs) pulsed with human recombinant prostate-specific antigen (PSA) (Dendritophage-rPSA). Twenty-four patients with histologically proven prostate carcinoma and an isolated postoperative rise of serum PSA (>1 ng/ml to 10 ng/ml) after radical prostatectomy were included. The patients received nine administrations of PSA-loaded DCs by combined intravenous, subcutaneous, and intradermal routes over 21 weeks. Postbaseline blood tests were performed at months 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 (PSA levels), at months 6 and 12 (circulating prostate cancer cells), at month 6 (anti-PSA IgG and IgM antibodies), and at up to eight time points before, during, and after immunization (PSA-specific T cells). Circulating prostate cancer cells detected in six patients at baseline were undetectable at 6 months and remained undetectable at 12 months. Eleven patients had a postbaseline transient PSA decrease on one to three occasions, predominantly occurring at month 1 (7 patients) or month 3 (2 patients). Maximum PSA decrease ranged from 6% to 39%. PSA decrease on at least one occasion was more frequent in patients with low Gleason score ( p=0.016) at prostatectomy and with positive skin tests at study baseline ( p=0.04). PSA-specific T cells were detected ex vivo by ELISpot for IFN-gamma in 7 patients before vaccination and in 11 patients after vaccination. Of the latter 11 patients, 5 had detectable T cells both before and during the vaccination period, 4 only during the vaccination period, while 2 patients could for technical reasons not be assessed prevaccination. No induction of anti-PSA IgG or IgM antibodies was detected. There were no serious adverse events or otherwise severe toxicities observed during the trial. Immunization with Dendritophage-rPSA was feasible and safe in this cohort of patients. An immune response specific for PSA could be detected in some patients. A notable effect was the disappearance of circulating prostate cells in all patients who were RT-PCR positive before vaccination.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0340-7004
Volume :
53
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
14760510
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-003-0451-2