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A lethally irradiated allogeneic granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor-secreting tumor vaccine for pancreatic adenocarcinoma. A Phase II trial of safety, efficacy, and immune activation.

Authors :
Lutz, Eric
Lutz, Eric
Yeo, Charles J
Lillemoe, Keith D
Biedrzycki, Barbara
Kobrin, Barry
Herman, Joseph
Sugar, Elizabeth
Piantadosi, Steven
Cameron, John L
Solt, Sara
Onners, Beth
Tartakovsky, Irena
Choi, Miri
Sharma, Rajni
Illei, Peter B
Hruban, Ralph H
Abrams, Ross A
Le, Dung
Jaffee, Elizabeth
Laheru, Dan
Lutz, Eric
Lutz, Eric
Yeo, Charles J
Lillemoe, Keith D
Biedrzycki, Barbara
Kobrin, Barry
Herman, Joseph
Sugar, Elizabeth
Piantadosi, Steven
Cameron, John L
Solt, Sara
Onners, Beth
Tartakovsky, Irena
Choi, Miri
Sharma, Rajni
Illei, Peter B
Hruban, Ralph H
Abrams, Ross A
Le, Dung
Jaffee, Elizabeth
Laheru, Dan
Source :
Annals of surgery; vol 253, iss 2, 328-335; 0003-4932
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

PurposeSurgical resection provides the only possibility of cure for pancreas cancer. A standard adjuvant approach has not been established. We tested the safety and efficacy of a granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-based immunotherapy administered in patients with resected pancreatic adenocarcinoma.Patients and methodsA single institution phase II study of 60 patients with resected pancreatic adenocarcinoma was performed. Each immunotherapy treatment consisted of a total of 5 × 108 GM-CSF-secreting cells distributed equally among 3 lymph node regions. The first immunotherapy treatment was administered 8 to 10 weeks after surgical resection. Subsequently, patients received 5-FU based chemoradiation. Patients who remained disease-free after completion of chemoradiotherapy received treatments 2 to 4, each 1 month apart. A fifth and final booster was administered 6 months after the fourth immunotherapy. The primary endpoint was disease free survival and secondary endpoints were overall survival and toxicity, and the induction of mesothelin specific T cell responses.ResultsThe median disease-free survival is 17.3 months (95% CI, 14.6-22.8) with median survival of 24.8 months (95% CI, 21.2-31.6). The administration of immunotherapy was well tolerated. In addition, the post-immunotherapy induction of mesothelin-specific CD8+ T cells in HLA-A1+ and HLA-A2+patients correlates with disease-free survival.ConclusionsAn immunotherapy approach integrated with chemoradiation is safe and demonstrates an overall survival that compares favorably with published data for resected pancreas cancer. These data suggest additional boost immunotherapies given at regular intervals beyond 1 year postsurgery should be tested in future studies, and provide the rationale for conducting a multicenter phase II study.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Annals of surgery; vol 253, iss 2, 328-335; 0003-4932
Notes :
Annals of surgery vol 253, iss 2, 328-335 0003-4932
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367439964
Document Type :
Electronic Resource