11 results on '"Karioja-Kallio, Aila"'
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2. Treatment of Cancer Patients With a Serotype 5/3 Chimeric Oncolytic Adenovirus Expressing GMCSF
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Koski, Anniina, Kangasniemi, Lotta, Escutenaire, Sophie, Pesonen, Sari, Cerullo, Vincenzo, Diaconu, Iulia, Nokisalmi, Petri, Raki, Mari, Rajecki, Maria, Guse, Kilian, Ranki, Tuuli, Oksanen, Minna, Holm, Sirkka-Liisa, Haavisto, Elina, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Laasonen, Leena, Partanen, Kaarina, Ugolini, Matteo, Helminen, Andreas, Karli, Eerika, Hannuksela, Päivi, Pesonen, Saila, Joensuu, Timo, Kanerva, Anna, and Hemminki, Akseli
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- 2010
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3. Integrin targeted oncolytic adenoviruses Ad5-D24-RGD and Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF for treatment of patients with advanced chemotherapy refractory solid tumors
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Pesonen, Sari, Diaconu, Iulia, Cerullo, Vincenzo, Escutenaire, Sophie, Raki, Mari, Kangasniemi, Lotta, Nokisalmi, Petri, Dotti, Gianpietro, Guse, Kilian, Laasonen, Leena, Partanen, Kaarina, Karli, Eerika, Haavisto, Elina, Oksanen, Minna, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Hannuksela, Päivi, Holm, Sirkka-Liisa, Kauppinen, Satu, Joensuu, Timo, Kanerva, Anna, and Hemminki, Akseli
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- 2012
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4. Toxicological and bio-distribution profile of a GM-CSF-expressing, double-targeted, chimeric oncolytic adenovirus ONCOS-102 – Support for clinical studies on advanced cancer treatment.
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Kuryk, Lukasz, Vassilev, Lotta, Ranki, Tuuli, Hemminki, Akseli, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Levälampi, Onerva, Vuolanto, Antti, Cerullo, Vincenzo, and Pesonen, Sari
- Subjects
CLINICAL trials ,ANIMAL models of cancer ,CANCER treatment ,CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE ,ADENOVIRUSES - Abstract
The purpose of this work was to carry out preclinical toxicity and bio-distribution studies required for regulatory approval of a clinical trial application for Phase I clinical studies of ONCOS-102 (Ad5/3-D24-GM-CSF) for therapy of advanced cancers (NCT01598129). The study design, route of administration and dosage differs from the clinical protocol and in more detail, investigate bio-distribution and toxicological profile of ONCOS-102 treatment in animal model. The study was carried out in 300 hamsters divided into nine test groups–three bio-distribution groups and six groups for analysis of toxicity. Hamsters received ONCOS-102 by intracardial, intraperitoneal or subcutaneous injections. Additionally, one group was administered twice a week with intraperitoneal injections of Cyclophosphamide. The control animals were administered with NaCl solution without ONCOS-102 in the same volume and the same way. No adverse effects of repeated administration of ONCOS-102 including body weight, food consumption, hematology and clinical chemistry parameters, histopathology and bio-accumulation were observed in the course of 6-month administration and following 3- month recovery period. All obtained findings indicate the treatment clinically safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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5. 665. Toxicity and Bio-Distribution of a GM-CSF-Expressing, Chimeric Oncolytic Adenovirus ONCOS-102
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Kuryk, Lukasz, Vassilev, Lotta, Ranki, Tuuli, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Levälampi, Onerva, Vuolanto, Antti, Cerullo, Vincenzo, and Pesonen, Sari
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- 2015
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6. In vivo and in vitro distribution of type 5 and fiber-modified oncolytic adenoviruses in human blood compartments.
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Escutenaire, Sophie, Cerullo, Vincenzo, Diaconu, Iulia, Ahtiainen, Laura, Hannuksela, Päivi, Oksanen, Minna, Haavisto, Elina, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Holm, Sirkka-Liisa, Kangasniemi, Lotta, Ribacka, Camilla, Kauppinen, Satu, Joensuu, Timo, Petteri Arstila, T., Pesonen, Sari, Kanerva, Anna, and Hemminki, Akseli
- Abstract
Background. Successful tumor targeting of systemically administered oncolytic adenoviruses may be hindered by interactions with blood components. Materials and methods. Blood distribution of oncolytic adenoviruses featuring type 5 adenovirus fiber, 5/3 capsid chimerism, or RGD-4C in the fiber knob was investigated in vitro and in patients with refractory solid tumors. Results. Virus titers and prevalence in serum of patients increased over the first post-treatment week, suggesting replication. Detection of low virus loads was more sensitive in blood clots than in serum, although viral levels > 500 viral particles/mL did not differ significantly between both sample types. While adenovirus bound to erythrocytes, platelets, granulocytes, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro, the virus was mainly detectable in erythrocytes and granulocytes in cancer patients. Taken together with a temporary post-treatment decrease in thrombocyte counts, platelet activation by adenovirus and subsequent clearance seem likely to occur in humans. Fiber modifications had limited observed effect on virus distribution in blood cell compartments. Neutrophils, monocytes and cytotoxic T lymphocytes were the major leukocyte subpopulations interacting with adenoviruses. Conclusion. Serum and blood clots are relevant to estimate oncolytic adenovirus replication. Insight into viral interactions with blood cells may contribute to the development of new strategies for tumor delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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7. Oncolytic Immunotherapy of Advanced Solid Tumors with a CD40L-Expressing Replicating Adenovirus: Assessment of Safety and Immunologic Responses in Patients.
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Pesonen, Sari, Diaconu, Iulia, Kangasniemi, Lotta, Ranki, Tuuli, Kanerva, Anna, Pesonen, Saila K., Gerdemann, Ulrike, Leen, Ann M., Kairemo, Kalevi, Oksanen, Minna, Haavisto, Elina, Holm, Sirkka-Liisa, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Kauppinen, Satu, Partanen, Kaarina P. L., Laasonen, Leena, Joensuu, Tima, Alanko, Tuomo, Cerullo, Vincenzo, and Hemminki, Akseli
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IMMUNOSUPPRESSION , *TUMORS , *IMMUNOLOGY , *ONCOLOGY , *CYTOKINES - Abstract
The immunosuppressive environment of advanced tumors is a primary obstacle to the efficacy of immunostimulatory and vaccine approaches. Here, we report an approach to arm an oncolytic virus with CD40 ligand (CD40L) to stimulate beneficial immunologic responses in patients. A double-targeted chimeric adenovirus controlled by the hTERT promoter and expressing CD40L (CGTG-401) was constructed and nine patients with progressing advanced solid tumors refractory to standard therapies were treated intratumorally. No serious adverse events resulting in patient hospitalization occurred. Moderate or no increases in neutralizing antibodies were seen, suggesting effective Th1 immunologic effects. An assessment of the blood levels of virus indicated 17.5% of the samples (n=40) were positive at a low level early after treatment, but not thereafter. In contrast, high levels of virus, CD40L, and RANTES were documented locally at the tumor. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were analyzed by IFN-γ ELISPOT analysis and induction of both survivin-specific and adenovirus-specific T cells was seen. Antitumor T-cell responses were even more pronounced when assessed by intracellular cytokine staining after stimulation with tumor type-specific peptide pools. Of the evaluable patients, 83% displayed disease control at 3 months and in both cases in which treatment was continued the effect was sustained for at least 8 months. Injected and noninjected lesions responded identically. Together, these findings support further clinical evaluation of CGTG-401. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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8. Integrin targeted oncolytic adenoviruses Ad5-D24-RGD and Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF for treatment of patients with advanced chemotherapy refractory solid tumors
- Author
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Petri Nokisalmi, Satu Kauppinen, Vincenzo Cerullo, Lotta Kangasniemi, Gianpietro Dotti, Anna Kanerva, Sophie Escutenaire, Iulia Diaconu, Akseli Hemminki, Eerika Karli, Kaarina Partanen, Sari Pesonen, Elina Haavisto, Aila Karioja-Kallio, Sirkka Liisa Holm, Leena Laasonen, Timo Joensuu, Minna Oksanen, Päivi Hannuksela, Mari Raki, Kilian Guse, Pesonen, Sari, Diaconu, Iulia, Cerullo, Vincenzo, Escutenaire, Sophie, Raki, Mari, Kangasniemi, Lotta, Nokisalmi, Petri, Dotti, Gianpietro, Guse, Kilian, Laasonen, Leena, Partanen, Kaarina, Karli, Eerika, Haavisto, Elina, Oksanen, Minna, Karioja-Kallio, Aila, Hannuksela, Päivi, Holm, Sirkka-Liisa, Kauppinen, Satu, Joensuu, Timo, Kanerva, Anna, and Hemminki, Akseli
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Male ,Integrins ,Cancer Research ,viruses ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Integrin ,Virus Replication ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Neoplasms ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Fatigue ,Oncolytic Virotherapy ,0303 health sciences ,ELISPOT ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,3. Good health ,Oncolytic Viruses ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Oligopeptide ,Female ,Genetic Vector ,Oligopeptides ,Human ,Oncolytic adenovirus ,Adult ,Fever ,Genetic Vectors ,Oncolytic Viruse ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Adenoviridae ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Tumor marker ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,medicine.disease ,Oncolytic virus ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Immunology ,DNA, Viral ,Cancer research ,Neoplasm ,business - Abstract
The safety of oncolytic viruses for treatment of cancer has been shown in clinical trials while antitumor efficacy has often remained modest. As expression of the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor may be variable in advanced tumors, we developed Ad5-D24-RGD, a p16/Rb pathway selective oncolytic adenovirus featuring RGD-4C modification of the fiber. This allows viral entry through alpha-v-beta integrins frequently highly expressed in advanced tumors. Advanced tumors are often immunosuppressive which results in lack of tumor eradication despite abnormal epitopes being present. Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GMCSF) is a potent activator of immune system with established antitumor properties. To stimulate antitumor immunity and break tumor associated immunotolerance, we constructed Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF, featuring GMCSF controlled by the adenoviral E3 promoter. Preliminary safety of Ad5-D24-RGD and Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF for treatment of human cancer was established. Treatments with Ad5-D24-RGD (N = 9) and Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF (N = 7) were well tolerated. Typical side effects were grade 1-2 fatigue, fever and injection site pain. 77% (10/13) of evaluable patients showed virus in circulation for at least 2 weeks. In 3 out of 6 evaluable patients, disease previously progressing stabilized after a single treatment with Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF. In addition, 2/3 patients had stabilization or reduction in tumor marker levels. All patients treated with Ad5-D24-RGD showed disease progression in radiological analysis, although 3/6 had temporary reduction or stabilization of marker levels. Induction of tumor and adenovirus specific immunity was demonstrated with ELISPOT in Ad5-RGD-D24-GMCSF treated patients. RGD modified oncolytic adenoviruses with or without GMCSF seem safe for further clinical development.
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- 2012
9. T-cell subsets in peripheral blood and tumors of patients treated with oncolytic adenoviruses.
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Taipale K, Liikanen I, Juhila J, Karioja-Kallio A, Oksanen M, Turkki R, Linder N, Lundin J, Ristimäki A, Kanerva A, Koski A, Joensuu T, Vähä-Koskela M, and Hemminki A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Child, Female, Humans, Lymphocyte Count, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating immunology, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms genetics, T-Lymphocyte Subsets metabolism, Transduction, Genetic, Transgenes, Young Adult, Adenoviridae genetics, Genetic Therapy, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms therapy, Oncolytic Virotherapy, Oncolytic Viruses genetics, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology
- Abstract
The quality of the antitumor immune response is decisive when developing new immunotherapies for cancer. Oncolytic adenoviruses cause a potent immunogenic stimulus and arming them with costimulatory molecules reshapes the immune response further. We evaluated peripheral blood T-cell subsets of 50 patients with refractory solid tumors undergoing treatment with oncolytic adenovirus. These data were compared to changes in antiviral and antitumor T cells, treatment efficacy, overall survival, and T-cell subsets in pre- and post-treatment tumor biopsies. Treatment caused a significant (P < 0.0001) shift in T-cell subsets in blood, characterized by a proportional increase of CD8(+) cells, and decrease of CD4(+) cells. Concomitant treatment with cyclophosphamide and temozolomide resulted in less CD4(+) decrease (P = 0.041) than cyclophosphamide only. Interestingly, we saw a correlation between T-cell changes in peripheral blood and the tumor site. This correlation was positive for CD8(+) and inverse for CD4(+) cells. These findings give insight to the interconnections between peripheral blood and tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) populations regarding oncolytic virotherapy. In particular, our data suggest that induction of T-cell response is not sufficient for clinical response in the context of immunosuppressive tumors, and that peripheral blood T cells have a complicated and potentially misleading relationship with TILs.
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- 2015
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10. Oncolytic adenovirus ICOVIR-7 in patients with advanced and refractory solid tumors.
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Nokisalmi P, Pesonen S, Escutenaire S, Särkioja M, Raki M, Cerullo V, Laasonen L, Alemany R, Rojas J, Cascallo M, Guse K, Rajecki M, Kangasniemi L, Haavisto E, Karioja-Kallio A, Hannuksela P, Oksanen M, Kanerva A, Joensuu T, Ahtiainen L, and Hemminki A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antibodies, Viral analysis, Child, Female, Humans, Interleukins blood, Male, Middle Aged, Oncolytic Virotherapy adverse effects, Retreatment, Treatment Outcome, Virus Replication, Adenoviridae, Neoplasms therapy, Oncolytic Virotherapy methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Twenty-one patients with cancer were treated with a single round of oncolytic adenovirus ICOVIR-7., Experimental Design: ICOVIR-7 features an RGD-4C modification of the fiber HI-loop of serotype 5 adenovirus for enhanced entry into tumor cells. Tumor selectivity is mediated by an insulator, a modified E2F promoter, and a Rb-binding site deletion of E1A, whereas replication is optimized with E2F binding hairpins and a Kozak sequence. ICOVIR-7 doses ranged from 2 x 10(10) to 1 x 10(12) viral particles. All patients had advanced and metastatic solid tumors refractory to standard therapies., Results: ICOVIR-7 treatment was well tolerated with mild to moderate fever, fatigue, elevated liver transaminases, chills, and hyponatremia. One patient had grade 3 anemia but no other serious side effects were seen. At baseline, 9 of 21 of patients had neutralizing antibody titers against the ICOVIR-7 capsid. Treatment resulted in neutralizing antibody titer induction within 4 weeks in 16 of 18 patients. No elevations of serum proinflammatory cytokine levels were detected. Viral genomes were detected in the circulation in 18 of 21 of patients after injection and 7 of 15 of the samples were positive 2 to 4 weeks later suggesting viral replication., Conclusions: Overall, objective evidence of antitumor activity was seen in 9 of 17 evaluable patients. In radiological analyses, 5 of 12 evaluable patients had stabilization or reduction in tumor size. These consisted of one partial response, two minor responses and two cases of stable disease, all occurring in patients who had progressive disease before treatment. In summary, ICOVIR-7 treatment is apparently safe, resulting in anticancer activity, and is therefore promising for further clinical testing., (Copyright 2010 AACR.)
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- 2010
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11. Oncolytic adenovirus coding for granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor induces antitumoral immunity in cancer patients.
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Cerullo V, Pesonen S, Diaconu I, Escutenaire S, Arstila PT, Ugolini M, Nokisalmi P, Raki M, Laasonen L, Särkioja M, Rajecki M, Kangasniemi L, Guse K, Helminen A, Ahtiainen L, Ristimäki A, Räisänen-Sokolowski A, Haavisto E, Oksanen M, Karli E, Karioja-Kallio A, Holm SL, Kouri M, Joensuu T, Kanerva A, and Hemminki A
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- Adenoviridae immunology, Adenoviridae metabolism, Animals, Cricetinae, Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte immunology, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor biosynthesis, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor immunology, Humans, Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins, Microtubule-Associated Proteins immunology, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms virology, Survivin, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Transfection, Adenoviridae genetics, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor genetics, Immunotherapy methods, Neoplasms therapy, Oncolytic Virotherapy methods
- Abstract
Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GMCSF) can mediate antitumor effects by recruiting natural killer cells and by induction of tumor-specific cytotoxic T-cells through antigen-presenting cells. Oncolytic tumor cell-killing can produce a potent costimulatory danger signal and release of tumor epitopes for antigen-presenting cell sampling. Therefore, an oncolytic adenovirus coding for GMCSF was engineered and shown to induce tumor-specific immunity in an immunocompetent syngeneic hamster model. Subsequently, 20 patients with advanced solid tumors refractory to standard therapies were treated with Ad5-D24-GMCSF. Of the 16 radiologically evaluable patients, 2 had complete responses, 1 had a minor response, and 5 had disease stabilization. Responses were frequently seen in injected and noninjected tumors. Treatment was well tolerated and resulted in the induction of both tumor-specific and virus-specific immunity as measured by ELISPOT and pentamer analysis. This is the first time that oncolytic virus-mediated antitumor immunity has been shown in humans. Ad5-D24-GMCSF is promising for further clinical testing., (Copyright 2010 AACR.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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