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A vaccine targeting mutant IDH1 in newly diagnosed glioma

Authors :
Andreas von Deimling
Michael Platten
Antje Wick
Jörg Hense
Ghazaleh Tabatabai
Stefan Stevanovic
Edward W. Green
Theresa Bunse
Martin Misch
Inga Harting
Chin Leng Tan
Anita Schmitt
Wolfgang Wick
Khwab Sanghvi
Sune Justesen
Isabel Poschke
Geoffrey A. Behrens
Lisa-Marie Rother
Lucian Le Cornet
Oliver Schnell
Lukas Bunse
Michael O. Breckwoldt
Angelika Freitag
Felix Sahm
Michael Schmitt
Joachim P. Steinbach
Dietmar Krex
Martin Bendszus
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2021.

Abstract

Mutated isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) defines a molecularly distinct subtype of diffuse glioma1–3. The most common IDH1 mutation in gliomas affects codon 132 and encodes IDH1(R132H), which harbours a shared clonal neoepitope that is presented on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II4,5. An IDH1(R132H)-specific peptide vaccine (IDH1-vac) induces specific therapeutic T helper cell responses that are effective against IDH1(R132H)+ tumours in syngeneic MHC-humanized mice4,6–8. Here we describe a multicentre, single-arm, open-label, first-in-humans phase I trial that we carried out in 33 patients with newly diagnosed World Health Organization grade 3 and 4 IDH1(R132H)+ astrocytomas (Neurooncology Working Group of the German Cancer Society trial 16 (NOA16), ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02454634). The trial met its primary safety endpoint, with vaccine-related adverse events restricted to grade 1. Vaccine-induced immune responses were observed in 93.3% of patients across multiple MHC alleles. Three-year progression-free and death-free rates were 0.63 and 0.84, respectively. Patients with immune responses showed a two-year progression-free rate of 0.82. Two patients without an immune response showed tumour progression within two years of first diagnosis. A mutation-specificity score that incorporates the duration and level of vaccine-induced IDH1(R132H)-specific T cell responses was associated with intratumoral presentation of the IDH1(R132H) neoantigen in pre-treatment tumour tissue. There was a high frequency of pseudoprogression, which indicates intratumoral inflammatory reactions. Pseudoprogression was associated with increased vaccine-induced peripheral T cell responses. Combined single-cell RNA and T cell receptor sequencing showed that tumour-infiltrating CD40LG+ and CXCL13+ T helper cell clusters in a patient with pseudoprogression were dominated by a single IDH1(R132H)-reactive T cell receptor.<br />A phase 1 clinical trial provides evidence that a vaccine against mutant IDH1 is safe and produces a T helper immune response in patients with glioma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
592
Issue :
7854
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....30647b857181b433a443bbcb2a16df18