Cancer vaccine

A cancer vaccine is a vaccine that either treats existing cancer or prevents development of a cancer. Vaccines that treat existing cancer are known as therapeutic cancer vaccines.

This article is about therapeutic cancer vaccines. For preventive cancer vaccine, see cancer immunoprevention.

Some/many of the vaccines are "autologous", being prepared from samples taken from the patient, and are specific to that patient.

Some researchers claim that cancerous cells routinely arise and are destroyed by the immune system;[1] and that tumors form when the immune system fails to destroy them.[2]

Traditional vaccines

Some types of cancer, such as cervical cancer and some liver cancers, are caused by viruses (oncoviruses). Traditional vaccines against those viruses, such as HPV vaccine[3] and hepatitis B vaccine, prevent those types of cancer. These vaccines are not further discussed in this article. Other cancers are to some extent caused by bacterial infections (e.g. stomach cancer and Helicobacter pylori[4]). Traditional vaccines against cancer-causing bacteria (oncobacteria) are not further discussed in this article.

Method

One approach to cancer vaccination is to separate proteins from cancer cells and immunize patients against those proteins, in the hope of stimulating the immune system to kill the cancer cells. Research on cancer vaccines is underway for treatment of breast, lung, colon, skin, kidney, prostate and other cancers.[5]

Another approach is to generate an immune response in situ in the patient using oncolytic viruses. This approach was used in the drug talimogene laherparepvec, a version of herpes simplex virus engineered to selectively replicate in tumor tissue and to express the immune stimulatory protein GM-CSF. This enhances the anti-tumor immune response to tumor antigens released following viral lysis and provides a patient-specific vaccine.[6]

Clinical trials

In a phase III trial of follicular lymphoma (a type of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma), investigators reported that the BiovaxID (on average) prolonged remission by 44.2 months, versus 30.6 months for the control.[7]

On April 14, 2009, Dendreon Corporation announced that their Phase III clinical trial of Provenge, a cancer vaccine designed to treat prostate cancer, had demonstrated an increase in survival. It received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for use in the treatment of advanced prostate cancer patients on April 29, 2010.[8][9]

On April 8, 2008, New York-based company Antigenics announced that it had received approval for the first therapeutic cancer vaccine in Russia. It is the first approval by a regulatory body of a cancer immunotherapy. The treatment, Oncophage, increased recurrence-free survival by a little more than a year according to the results of a phase III clinical trial. The approval is for a subset of kidney cancer patients who are at intermediate risk for disease recurrence. It awaits approval in the US and EU.[10] but will need a new trial for FDA approval.

Interim results from a phase 3 trial of talimogene laherparepvec in melanoma showed a significant tumour response compared to administration of GM-CSF alone.[6]

Vaccine candidates

Most of the cancer vaccines in development address specific cancer types and are therapeutic vaccines. These include:

Vaccine candidates
Developer Vaccine Notes
Aduro GVAX formerly developed by Cell Genesys
Advaxis[11] ADXS11-001, ADXS31-001, ADXS31-164
ALVAC-CEA vaccine
Avax Technologies AC Vaccine
Amgen talimogene laherparepvec
Biovest International BiovaxID Phase III
Bavarian Nordic[12] Prostvac
Celldex Therapeutics CDX110, rindopepimut), CDX1307 and CDX1401
The Center of Molecular Immunology, CimaVax-EGF lung cancer
CureVac[13] CV9104 mRNA-based cancer immunotherapy; CV9104 is currently being evaluated in an international Phase 2b trial in patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer.[13]
Dendreon Corp DNDN) Neuvenge HER2/neu expressing cancers such as Breast, Bladder, colon, Ovarian),[14]
Galena Biopharma NeuVax
Generex Biotechnology (Antigen Express) Ae-37)
Geron Corporation GRNVAC1
GlaxoSmithKline Melanoma treatment targeting MAGE-A3
GlobeImmune[15][16] Tarmogens, GI-4000, GI-6207, GI-6301)[17]
Heat Biologics ImPACT Therapy NSCLC and other cancers
Immatics biotechnologies IMA901 Renal cancer)[18]
Immunitor hepcortespenlisimut-L Trials of an oral cancer vaccine[19][20] A Phase 3 trial in hepatocellular carcinoma was first made public in September 2014.[21]
Merck Stimuvax in 2009, is starting phase III trials of for breast cancer.[22] It had promising results from a phase IIB trial for inoperable lung cancer.
Northwest Biotherapeutics[23] DCVax-L, DCVax-Direct, DCVax Prostate Phase 3 trial for GBM
Panacela Labs, Inc.[24] CBLI MOBILAN Adenovirus-based treatment inducing immune response. Final stage of preclinical development.
Prima BioMed LTD Cvac Ovarian cancer in phase III.[25]

Regeneus - RGSH4K - A promising innovative personalised cancer immunotherapy

Scancell Holdings, SCIB1
OncoPep, Inc NCT01758328, PVX-410 (Multi-peptide vacine) in a phase I/II trial[26] to treat smoldering multiple myeloma.[27]

Approved oncovaccines

Oncophage was approved in Russia in 2008 for kidney cancer. It is marketed by Antigenics Inc.

Sipuleucel-T, Provenge, was approved by the FDA in April 2010 for metastatic hormone-refractory prostate cancer. It is marketed by Dendreon Corp.

Abandoned research

CancerVax (Canvaxin), Genitope Corp (MyVax personalized immunotherapy), and FavId (Favrille Inc) are examples of cancer vaccine projects that have been terminated, both due to poor phase III results.

Desirable characteristics

Cancer vaccines seek to target a tumor-secific antigen and distinct from self-proteins. Selection of the appropriate adjuvant to activate antigen-presenting cells to stimulate immune responses, is required. Bacillus Calmette-Guérin, an aluminum-based salt, and a squalene-oil-water emulsion are approved for clinical use. An effective vaccine also should seek to stimulate long term memory to prevent tumor recurrence. Some scientists claim both the innate and adaptive immune systems must be activated to achieve total tumor elimination.[28]

Antigen candidates

Tumor antigens have been divided into two categories: shared tumor antigens; and unique tumor antigens. Shared antigens are expressed by many tumors. Unique tumor antigens result from mutations induced through physical or chemical carcinogens; they are therefore expressed only by individual tumors.

In one approach, vaccines contain whole tumor cells, though these vaccines have been less effective in eliciting immune responses in spontaneous cancer models. Defined tumor antigens decrease the risk of autoimmunity, but because the immune response is directed to a single epitope, tumors can evade destruction through antigen loss variance. A process called "epitope spreading" or "provoked immunity" may mitigate this weakness, as sometimes an immune response to a single antigen can lead to immunity against other antigens on the same tumor.[28]

Hypothesized problems

A vaccine against a particular virus is relatively easy to create. The virus is foreign to the body, and therefore expresses antigens that the immune system can recognize. Furthermore, viruses usually only provide a few viable variants. By contrast, developing vaccines for viruses that mutate constantly such as influenza or HIV has been problematic.

A tumour can have many cell types of cells, each with different cell-surface antigens. Those cells are derived from each patient and display few if any antigens that are foreign to that individual. This makes it difficult for the immune system to distinguish cancer cells from normal cells. Some scientists believe that renal cancer and melanoma are the two cancers with most evidence of spontaneous and effective immune responses, possibly because they often display antigens that are evaluated as foreign. Many attempts at developing cancer vaccines are directed against these tumors. However, Provenge's success in prostate cancer, a disease that never spontaneously regresses, suggests that cancers other than melanoma and renal cancer may be equally amenable to immune attack.

However, most vaccine clinical trials have failed or had modest according to the standard RECIST criteria.[29] The precise reasons are unknown, but possible explanations include:

Recommendations

In January 2009, a review article made recommendations for success as follows:[30]

See also

References

  1. Shankaran V, Ikeda H, Bruce AT, White JM, Swanson PE, Old LJ, Schreiber RD (2001-04-26). "IFNgamma and lymphocytes prevent primary tumour development and shape tumour immunogenicity.". Nature. 410 (6832): 1107–1111. doi:10.1038/35074122. PMID 11323675.
  2. Dunn GP, Old LJ, Schreiber RD (2004). "The three Es of cancer immunoediting". Annu. Rev. Immunol. 22 (i): 329–60. doi:10.1146/annurev.immunol.22.012703.104803. PMID 15032581.
  3. Arvind Babu RS; Kiran Kumar K; Sridhar Reddy G; Anuradha Ch (2010). "Cancer Vaccine : A Review" (PDF). Journal of Orofacial Sciences. 2 (3): 77–82.
  4. "Oral vaccine could fight source of stomach cancers". Vaccine News Reports.
  5. Giarelli E (2007). "Cancer vaccines: a new frontier in prevention and treatment". Oncology (Williston Park). 21 (11 Suppl Nurse Ed): 11–8. PMID 18154203.
  6. 1 2 Amgen press release. Amgen announces top-line results of phase 3 talimogene laherparepvec trial in melanoma. Mar 19, 2013. Available here
  7. Idiotype vaccine therapy (BiovaxID) in follicular lymphoma in first complete remission: Phase III clinical trial results. S. J. Schuster, et al. 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting, J Clin Oncol 27:18s, 2009 (suppl; abstr 2)
  8. "Approval Letter - Provenge". Food and Drug Administration. 2010-04-29.
  9. "What Comes After Dendreon's Provenge?". 18 Oct 2010.
  10. "Dead".
  11. "Updated Advaxis Phase I Survival Data Indicates Long-Term Immune Protection". Medical News Today. 4 October 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  12. "Bavarian Nordic".
  13. 1 2 "Trial of RNActive®-Derived Prostate Cancer Vaccine in Metastatic Castrate-refractory Prostate Cancer".
  14. "Dendreon Presents Integrated Analysis of Clinical Data from Neuvenge Trials at Chemotherapy Foundation Symposium - Drugs.com MedNews".
  15. "GlobeImmune Initiates Phase 2 Trial for Pancreas Cancer" 2006
  16. "GlobeImmune Raises $17.5M in Series E Financing - GEN News Highlights".
  17. "Search of: globeimmune - List Results - ClinicalTrials.gov".
  18. "Immatics Raises Nearly €54M to Take Lead Therapeutic Cancer Vaccine into Phase III - GEN News Highlights - GEN".
  19. FDA Orphan designation
  20. "Immunotherapy of liver cancer with hepcortespenlisimut-L: open-label Phase II clinical study in patients with advanced HCC". Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer. 3 (Suppl 2): P200. doi:10.1186/2051-1426-3-s2-p200. PMC 4649454Freely accessible.
  21. Clinicaltrials.gov https://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT02232490
  22. Burger, Ludwig (June 22, 2009). "UPDATE 2-Merck to test stimuvax cancer drug in Phase III". Reuters.
  23. "DCVax ® Technology - Northwest Biotherapeutics".
  24. "How long before CVac, a new treatment for ovarian cancer, is available in the UK?". The Daily Telegraph. London. February 10, 2012.
  25. "Phase 1/2a Study of Cancer Vaccine to Treat Smoldering Multiple Myeloma - Full Text View - ClinicalTrials.gov".
  26. "Multiple Myeloma".
  27. 1 2 Pejawar-Gaddy S, Finn O (2008). "Cancer vaccines: Accomplishments and challenges". Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology. 67: 93–102. doi:10.1016/j.critrevonc.2008.02.010.
  28. Rosenberg SA, Yang JC, Restifo NP (September 2004). "Cancer immunotherapy: moving beyond current vaccines". Nat. Med. 10 (9): 909–15. doi:10.1038/nm1100. PMC 1435696Freely accessible. PMID 15340416.
  29. Johnson, Robert S.; Walker, Anthony I.; Ward, Stephen J. (2009-01-01). "Cancer vaccines: will we ever learn?". Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy. 9 (1): 67–74. doi:10.1586/14737140.9.1.67. ISSN 1473-7140.

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