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Data from Combination Neoantigen-Based Dendritic Cell Vaccination and Adoptive T-Cell Transfer Induces Antitumor Responses Against Recurrence of Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Authors :
Ming Kuang
Zhenwei Peng
Baogang Peng
Jiaming Lai
Dongming Li
Shunli Shen
Shaoqiang Li
Lixia Xu
Jiehui Tan
Zelong Liu
Zihao Dai
Xiangjun Zhou
Xiaoshuang Li
Yifan Ma
Longqing Tang
Yanyan Han
Minghui He
Huanjing Hu
Yubin Xie
Bin Li
Qian Zhou
Han Xiao
Zebin Chen
Wei Wang
Tianhong Su
Xuezhen Zeng
Jie Mei
Wei Hu
Shuling Chen
Sui Peng
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

A high rate of recurrence after curative therapy is a major challenge for the management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Currently, no effective adjuvant therapy is available to prevent HCC recurrence. We designed a personalized neoantigen-loaded dendritic cell vaccine and neoantigen-activated T-cell therapy, and used it as adjuvant therapy to treat 10 patients with HCC who had undergone curative resection or radiofrequency ablation in the first stage of a phase II trial (NCT03067493). The primary outcomes were safety and neoantigen-specific immune response. Disease-free survival (DFS) was also evaluated. The immunotherapy was successfully administered to all the patients without unexpected delay and demonstrated a reasonable safety profile with no grade ≥3 treatment-related side effects reported. Seventy percent of patients generated de novo circulating multiclonal neoantigen-specific T-cell responses. Induced neoantigen-specific immunity was maintained over time, and epitope spreading was observed. Patients who generated immune responses to treatment exhibited prolonged DFS compared with nonresponders (P = 0.012), with 71.4% experiencing no relapse for 2 years after curative treatment. High expression of an immune stimulatory signature, enhanced immune-cell infiltration (i.e., CD8+ T cells), and upregulated expression of T-cell inflammatory gene profiles were found in the primary tumors of the responders. In addition, neoantigen depletion (immunoediting) was present in the recurrent tumors compared with the primary tumors (7/9 vs. 1/17, P = 0.014), suggesting that immune evasion occurred under the pressure of immunotherapy. Our study indicates that neoantigen-based combination immunotherapy is feasible, safe, and has the potential to reduce HCC recurrence after curative treatment.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8c4214172dacd84996fb81e06907c17c