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A phase I vaccination study with tyrosinase in patients with stage II melanoma using recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA-hTyr)

Authors :
Cedrik M. Britten
Alexander Enk
Nathaly Arndtz
Stephan N. Wagner
Paul Chaplin
Thomas Wölfel
Gerold Schuler
Jost Metz
Tolga A. Sagban
Thilo Jakob
Bernd Weigle
Luis Mateo
Gerd Sutter
Beatrice Schuler-Thurner
Hans A. Lehr
Barbara Petzold
Rüdiger Hein
Burkhard Schmidt
Ingo Drexler
Marc Schmitz
Christoph Huber
Ulrike Siepmann
Ralf G. Meyer
Helga Bernhard
Source :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII. 54(5)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

A significant percentage of patients with stage II melanomas suffer a relapse after surgery and therefore need the development of adjuvant therapies. In the study reported here, safety and immunological response were analyzed after vaccination in an adjuvant setting with recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara carrying the cDNA for human tyrosinase (MVA-hTyr). A total of 20 patients were included and vaccinated three times at 4-week intervals with 5x10(8) IU of MVA-hTyr each time. The responses to the viral vector, to known HLA class I-restricted tyrosinase peptides, and to dendritic cells transfected with tyrosinase mRNA, were investigated by ELISpot assay on both ex vivo T cells and on T cells stimulated in vitro prior to testing. The delivery of MVA-hTyr was safe and did not cause any side effects above grade 2. A strong response to the viral vector was achieved, indicated by an increase in the frequency of MVA-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and an increase in virus-specific antibody titers. However, no tyrosinase-specific T-cell or antibody response was observed with MVA-hTyr in any of the vaccinated patients. Although MVA-hTyr provides a safe and effective antigen-delivery system, it does not elicit a measurable immune response to its transgene product in patients with stage II melanoma after repeated combined intradermal and subcutaneous vaccination. We presume that modification of the antigen and/or prime-boost vaccination applying different approaches to antigen delivery may be required to induce an effective tyrosinase-specific immune response.

Details

ISSN :
03407004
Volume :
54
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....950c3ce5f30d8018801a67a23e35fa7e