Immunologic responses to xenogeneic tyrosinase DNA vaccine administered by electroporation in patients with malignant melanoma Journal Article


Authors: Yuan, J.; Ku, G. Y.; Adamow, M.; Mu, Z.; Tandon, S.; Hannaman, D.; Chapman, P.; Schwartz, G.; Carvajal, R.; Panageas, K. S.; Houghton, A. N.; Wolchok, J. D.
Article Title: Immunologic responses to xenogeneic tyrosinase DNA vaccine administered by electroporation in patients with malignant melanoma
Abstract: Background: Prior studies show that intramuscular injection and particle-mediated epidermal delivery of xenogeneic melanosomal antigens (tyrosinase or Tyr, gp100) induce CD8+ T cell responses to the syngeneic protein. To further define the optimal vaccination strategy, we conducted a phase I study of in vivo electroporation (EP) of a murine Tyr DNA vaccine (pINGmuTyr) in malignant melanoma patients. Methods: Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A1, A2, A24 or B35 stage IIb-IV melanoma patients received up to five doses of the mouse tyrosinase DNA vaccine by EP every three weeks at dose levels of 0.2 mg, 0.5 mg, or 1.5 mg per injection. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were collected, cultured with a peptide pool containing eight HLA class I-restricted Tyr-specific T-cell epitopes, and analyzed by HLA-A*0101-restricted tetramers and intracellular cytokine staining (ICS). Results: Twenty-four patients received ≥ 1 dose of the pINGmuTyr vaccine; PBMCs from 21 patients who completed all five doses were available for Tyr immune assays. The only common toxicity was grade 1 injection site reaction. Six of 15 patients (40%) in the 1.5 mg dose cohort developed Tyr-reactive CD8+ T cell responses following stimulation, defined as a ≥ 3 standard deviation increase in baseline reactivity by tetramer or ICS assays. No Tyr-reactive CD8+ T cell response was detected in the 0.2 mg and 0.5 mg dose cohort patients. Epitope spreading of CD8+ T cell response to NY-ESO-1 was observed in one patient with vitiligo. One patient subsequently received ipilimumab and developed an enhanced Tyr-reactive response with polyfunctional cytokine profile. After a median follow-up of 40.9 months, median survival has not been reached. Conclusions: A regimen of five immunizations with pINGmuTyr administered by EP was found to be safe and resulted in Tyr-reactive immune responses in six of 15 patients at 1.5 mg dose cohort. © 2013 Yuan et al.
Keywords: adult; cancer survival; clinical article; aged; middle aged; unclassified drug; nonhuman; cancer staging; flow cytometry; cd8 antigen; cd8+ t lymphocyte; animal cell; mouse; melanoma; macrophage inflammatory protein 1beta; injection site reaction; cytokine; karnofsky performance status; immune response; tumor necrosis factor alpha; gamma interferon; ny eso 1 antigen; epitope; hla antigen class 1; hla b35 antigen; electroporation; dna vaccine; immunoassay; phase 1 clinical trial; monophenol monooxygenase; cd4 antigen; chemokine receptor ccr7; cd28 antigen; peripheral blood mononuclear cell; cd27 antigen; cd45ra antigen; lysosome associated membrane protein 1; hla a2 antigen; hla a24 antigen; tyrosinase; intracellular cytokine staining; hla a1 antigen; male; female; priority journal; article; epitope spreading; melanoma patient; tyrosinase dna vaccine
Journal Title: Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Volume: 1
ISSN: 2051-1426
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2013-01-01
Start Page: 20
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/2051-1426-1-20
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4019903
PUBMED: 24829756
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 November 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Gary Schwartz
    385 Schwartz
  2. Jedd D Wolchok
    905 Wolchok
  3. Richard D Carvajal
    148 Carvajal
  4. Geoffrey Yuyat Ku
    230 Ku
  5. Paul Chapman
    326 Chapman
  6. Katherine S Panageas
    512 Panageas
  7. Jianda Yuan
    105 Yuan
  8. Alan N Houghton
    364 Houghton
  9. Matthew J Adamow
    24 Adamow
  10. Zhenyu Mu
    11 Mu
  11. Sapna Tandon
    5 Tandon