Development of thyroglobulin antibodies after GVAX immunotherapy is associated with prolonged survival Journal Article


Authors: De Remigis, A.; de Gruijl, T. D.; Uram, J. N.; Tzou, S. C.; Iwama, S.; Talor, M. V.; Armstrong, T. D.; Santegoets, Sjam; Slovin, S. F.; Zheng, L.; Laheru, D. A.; Jaffee, E. M.; Gerritsen, W. R.; Van Den Eertwegh, A. J. M.; Le, D. T.; Caturegli, P.
Article Title: Development of thyroglobulin antibodies after GVAX immunotherapy is associated with prolonged survival
Abstract: Cancer immunotherapy induces a variety of autoinflammatory responses, including those against the thyroid gland, which can be exploited to predict clinical outcomes. Considering the paucity of information about thyroid autoimmunity in patients receiving cancer vaccines, we designed our study to assess the development of thyroglobulin antibodies (TgAbs) in patients treated with GVAX (vaccine made of a tumor cell type transfected with GM-CSF) and/or ipilimumab and correlated seroconversion with survival. Using both in house and commercial ELISA assays, we measured TgAbs in patients with pancreatic (No. = 553), prostate (No. = 535) or colon (No. = 58) cancer, before and after treatment with GVAX only (No. = 534), GVAX plus ipilimumab (No. = 542) or ipilimumab (No. = 520), and correlated their levels with patient's survival, disease status and T-cell surface markers. Antibodies to thyroperoxidase, myeloperoxidase, proteinase 3, insulin and actin were also measured. TgAbs specifically developed after GVAX, independent of the underlying cancer (81% in prostate, 75% colon cancer and 76% pancreatic cancer) and co-administration of ipilimumab (75% in GVAX only and 78% in GVAX plus ipilimumab). This TgAbs seroconversion could be detected mainly by the in house assay, suggesting that the thyroglobulin epitopes recognized by the antibodies induced by GVAX are different from the epitopes seen in the classic form of Hashimoto thyroiditis. Notably, TgAbs seroconversion was associated with significantly prolonged survival (p = 0.01 for pancreas and p = 0.005 for prostate cancer). In conclusion, GVAX immunotherapy induces the appearance of TgAbs that recognize a unique antigenic repertoire and associate with prolonged survival.
Keywords: ipilimumab; immunotherapy; pancreatic adenocarcinoma; ctla-4; metastatic melanoma; prostate-cancer; phase-ii; colony-stimulating factor; gm-csf; resistant; gvax; secreting tumor vaccine; immune activation; thyroglobulin antibodies; autoimmune thyroid-disease
Journal Title: International Journal of Cancer
Volume: 136
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0020-7136
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2015-01-01
Start Page: 127
End Page: 137
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000344011400014
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.28973
PROVIDER: Thomson Reuters Web of Scienceā„¢
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC4199892
PUBMED: 24832153
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Susan Slovin
    254 Slovin