Phase II trial of vaccination with autologous, irradiated melanoma cells engineered by adenoviral mediated gene transfer to secrete granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor in patients with stage III and IV melanoma
Tamara A. Sussman, Mariano Severgnini, Anita Giobbie-Hurder, Philip Friedlander, Scott J. Swanson, Michael Jaklitsch, Thomas Clancy, Laura A. Goguen, David Lautz, Richard Swanson, Heather Daley, Jerome Ritz, Glenn Dranoff, F. Stephen Hodi

TL;DR
A cancer vaccine using GM-CSF-secreting melanoma cells shows safety and disease control in stage III and IV melanoma patients.
Contribution
Demonstrates the safety and potential efficacy of GM-CSF-secreting melanoma vaccines in advanced melanoma patients.
Findings
The vaccine was successfully administered to all 61 patients with only grade 1-2 local skin reactions.
Stage III patients had a median OS of 71.1 months and PFS of 50.7 months, showing improved outcomes.
Changes in cytokine levels like IL-15, TRAIL, and IL-16 were associated with improved progression-free survival.
Abstract
In the era of immune checkpoint blockade, the role of cancer vaccines in immune priming has provided additional potential for therapeutic improvements. Prior studies have demonstrated delayed type hypersensitivity and anti-tumor immunity with vaccines engineered to secrete granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). The safety, efficacy and anti-tumor immunity of GM-CSF secreting vaccine in patients with previously treated stage III or IV melanoma needs further investigation. In this phase II trial, excised lymph node metastases were processed to single cells, transduced with an adenoviral vector encoding GM-CSF, irradiated, and cryopreserved. Individual vaccines were composed of 1x106, 4x106, or 1x107 tumor cells, and were injected intradermally and subcutaneously at weekly and biweekly intervals. The primary endpoints were feasibility of producing vaccine in stage III…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirus-based gene therapy research · CAR-T cell therapy research · Immunotherapy and Immune Responses
