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ABSTRACT: To evaluate the clinical efficacy of concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) using daily low-dose cisplatin for cervical cancer.
Fifty-one patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (FIGO stage IB2, bulky IIA, IIB-IVA) who were treated with CCRT as primary therapy at Kurume University Hospital between 2000 and 2007 were retrospectively reviewed. CCRT consisted of 5 mg/m(2)/day of cisplatin 5 days per week, and external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) administrated to whole pelvis to 45-50.6 Gy. High-dose-rate intracavitary brachytherapy was delivered in a single dose of 4-5 Gy at point A, once a week after 20-30 Gy of EBRT.
The median follow-up duration was 42 months (range, 5 to 116 months). The overall response rate was 94.1%. Five year overall survival rate was 71.5% and 46.2% in stage I or II, and stage III or IVA, respectively. During follow-up period, 30 recurrences (58.8%) were found, the local failure rate was 39%, and distant failure rate was 35.2%, and both (local and distant) were 15.7%. Hematological toxicities were the most frequent acute toxicities. Grade 3 and 4 neutropenia was observed in 37.3%. Late intestinal toxicities appeared in 7 cases (13.7%), which occurred between 6 and 114 months after treatment. Four cases required bowel surgery.
CCRT using daily low-dose cisplatin was tolerable and showed favorable initial response as the primary therapy for locally advanced uterine cervical cancer. But there was no remarkable long-term benefit for patients' survival or local disease control in this study. The incidence of late intestinal toxicity still requires further investigation.
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 04/2013; 24(2):108-13. · 1.49 Impact Factor
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Akimasa Fukui,
Satoko Matsueda, Kouichiro Kawano,
Naotake Tsuda,
Nobukazu Komatsu,
Shigeki Shichijo,
Tetsuro Sasada,
Satoshi Hattori,
Kimio Ushijima,
Kyogo Itoh,
Toshiharu Kamura
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ABSTRACT: Persistent infection of human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16 and 18 causes cervical cancer. To better understand immune responses to the prophylactic vaccine, HPV 16/18 L1 virus-like particles (HPV-VLPs), we investigated B cell epitopes of HPV16 L1-derived peptides.
Sera from mice immunized with HPV-16/18 L1 VLPs were analyzed for their IgG titers against 10 different HPV16 L1-derived peptides (20-mer) that contain human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-class I A-2, A-24 and class II DR.
One 20-mer peptide at positions 300 to 319 was identified as a common B cell epitope in both Balb/c (H-2d) and C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice. Mapping analysis showed that the 10-amino-acid sequence at positions 304to 313 was an immunogenic portion. It is of note that the binding capability of this 10-mer peptide to the HLA-A2 and HLA-A24 molecules was confirmed by the HLA class I stabilization assay. In addition, one unique 20-mer was determined as a B cell epitope in each strain.
These results might provide new information for better understanding of immune responses to HPV 16 L1.
Virology Journal 09/2012; 9:199. · 2.34 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A 61-year old woman underwent total abdominal hysterectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection under the diagnosis of endometrial cancer. Although pelvic lymph nodes were positive for adenocarcinoma with psamomma bodies, no other lesion that was a primary lesion was verified. A postoperative study revealed the existence of para-aortic lymph node and supraclavicular lymph node metastases. Therefore, the endometrial biopsy specimen was reviewed. With the findings of p53 positivity by immunohistochemistry in the papillary part, the final histopathological diagnosis was changed to endometrial serous adenocarcinoma. Postoperative chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy for supraclavicular lymph node metastasis achieved complete response. This type of tumor must be considered in a differential diagnosis when metastatic papillary serous carcinoma is detected, but the primary site remains unknown.
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 03/2011; 22(1):53-6. · 1.49 Impact Factor
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Masanori Noguchi,
Takashi Mine,
Nobukazu Komatsu,
Shigetaka Suekane,
Fukuko Moriya,
Kei Matsuoka,
Shigeru Yutani,
Shigeki Shichijo,
Akira Yamada,
Uhi Toh, [......],
Kouichi Azuma,
Hirotsugu Uemura,
Kiyotaka Okuno,
Kazumasa Matsumoto,
Hiroaki Yanagimoto,
Ryuya Yamanaka,
Masaaki Oka,
Satoru Todo,
Tetsuro Sasada,
Kyogo Itoh
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ABSTRACT: To investigate immunological biomarkers to predict overall survival of advanced cancer patients under treatment with personalized peptide vaccination, correlations between overall survival and biomarkers, including cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses to the vaccinated peptides, were investigated in 500 advanced cancer patients who received personalized peptide vaccination from October 2000 to October 2008. The best clinical response was assessed for in 436 patients, 43 patients (10%) had partial response, 144 patients (33%) had stable disease and 249 patients (57%) had progressive, with a median overall survival of 9.9 months. Both lymphocyte counts prior to the vaccination (P = 0.0095) and increased IgG response (P = 0.0116) to the vaccinated peptides, along with performance status (P < 0.0001), well correlated with overall survival. To confirm the superiority of IgG response to CTL response, the samples from advanced castration-resistant prostate cancer patients who survived more than 900 days (n=20) and those who died within 300 days (n=23) were analyzed further. As a result, both the numbers of peptides, to which increased IgG responses were observed, and the fold increases in IgG levels were significantly higher in long-term survivors (P = 0.000282 and P = 0.00045). In contrast, CTL responses were not statistically different between the two groups. Both lymphocyte numbers and IgG response were thus suggested to be biomarkers of cancer vaccine for advanced cancer patients.
Cancer biology & therapy 12/2010; 10(12):1266-79. · 2.64 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to find whether the peptide LRMK linked to the N-terminus of HER-2, 774-788 and shorter peptides create a T helper antigen, which can replace all functional HER-2 peptides in a cancer vaccine. Of the 6 LRMK-HER-2 peptides tested in the presence of IL-12, AE-37, AE-38 and AE-39 induced higher IFN-gamma in PBMCs from 4 healthy donors than the other peptides. AE-37 and AE-39 contained the immunogenic HER-2 peptide, p776 (774-788), while AE-38 contained the truncated HER-2 peptide G89 (777-788). The free, unprotected HER-2 peptide G89 (777-789) activated IFN-gamma production in PBMCs from another BRC patient. Responses to free p776 and F7 could not be tested. Three out of 11 patients responded strongly only to AE-37, while 3 of 10 patients responded strongly only to G89. One responded only to AE-39. All 3 patients diagnosed with DICS of mixed HER(hi), ER+ PR+ type responded to AE-37. Three out of 4 patients diagnosed with luminal cancer and one HERhi, ER- PR- BRC patient responded only to G89. AE-37, at low concentration, helped to expand more E75-TCR(Hi+Med) cells than the negative control AE-47, for IFN-gamma induction AE-47, but was a weaker helper than AE-47 at higher concentrations, and eliminated E75-TCR(Hi) cells. The strongest and most consistent effect of AE-37 was the elimination of CD4(Hi) CD25(Hi) cells. When LRMK is linked to AE-37, the side-chains of L(P-10) and R(P-9) are positioned away from MHC; LRMK forms a bi-strophynx (rotating-double-hook-like) structure when attached to AE-37 and the minimum HER-2 peptide in the peptide-binding groove (PBG). K(P-8) anchors the bi-strophynx to HLA-DR outside the PBG in a novel site DRalpha, 49-52. The HER-2 amino acids, Y(P-1) and R(P3) point towards TCR; R(P-9) and M(P-8) can contact the TCRValpha1. The positions of K(P-8) in AE-37 and Ava (epsilonV)(P-8) in AE-39 modulated immunogenicity of p776. It is unknown whether LRMK adds TCR contact points to the minimal HLA-DR-bound HER-2 peptide (780-788) or activates T-cells of other specificities to produce cytokines and die. Preferential activation of Th1 cells in distinct individuals by AE-37, G89 and AE-39 indicates that cancer vaccines will benefit from correct individual and disease-associated help. Emergence of distinct daughters of luminal and myoepithelial BRC stem cells during metastasis through "de-differentiation" and "reverse differentiation" of drug-resistant cancer requires personalized vaccines, which use an optimal-helper antigen.
Anticancer research 02/2009; 29(1):41-58. · 1.73 Impact Factor
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Shin Nishio,
Kimio Ushijima,
Naotake Tsuda,
Shuji Takemoto, Kouichiro Kawano,
Tomohiko Yamaguchi,
Naoyo Nishida,
Tatsuyuki Kakuma,
Hitoshi Tsuda,
Takahiro Kasamatsu,
Yuko Sasajima,
Masayoshi Kage,
Michihiko Kuwano,
Toshiharu Kamura
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ABSTRACT: Cap43 is a nickel- and calcium-inducible gene that plays important roles in the primary growth of malignant tumors, as well as in invasion and metastasis, most likely through its ability to induce cellular differentiation. This study investigated associations of Cap43 expression with angiogenesis and other clinicopathological factors in cervical adenocarcinoma. The clinical records of 100 women who underwent surgery for cervical adenocarcinoma were reviewed retrospectively. Microvessel density and the expression of Cap43 and VEGF in the surgical specimens were evaluated immunohistochemically. The Cap43 expression level was significantly associated with angiogenesis, tumor diameter, stromal invasion, lymphovascular space invasion, lymph node metastasis, and histopathological differentiation. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a significant association between the Cap43 expression level and survival: high Cap43 expression was related to poor survival. Our results suggest that increased expression of Cap43 is associated with angiogenesis and may be a poor prognostic indicator in women with cervical adenocarcinoma.
Cancer Letters 07/2008; 264(1):36-43. · 4.24 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Primary ovarian carcinoid tumors are rare. It has been reported that constipation was a presenting symptom in some patients with ovarian carcinoid. A case of strumal carcinoid of the ovary with contralateral clear cell adenocarcinoma of the ovary discovered with a complaint of constipation is described. Constipation was dramatically improved by resectioning the tumor. The tumor cells were positive for peptide YY (PYY) in the carcinoid component, but not in any other components. The present case could provide evidence of the correlation between constipation and PYY that has been reported elsewhere. Interestingly, the constipation caused by PYY also helped in discovering epithelial ovarian cancer.
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research 07/2007; 33(3):392-6. · 0.94 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to investigate whether fertility preservation influences the clinical outcome in patients with malignant germ cell tumors of the ovary (MGCTO).
A case study analysis was performed on patients with MGCTO treated at Kurume University Hospital between 1986 and 2004. Thirty-five patients were included in the study, 14 with immature teratoma, 11 with dysgerminoma, eight with endodermal sinus tumor, and two with mixed germ cell tumor. Twenty-three patients had International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage I (Ia, 11; Ib, 2; Ic, 10), one had stage II, seven had stage III, and four had stage IV disease.
Five patients with stage III or IV disease received radical surgery. Thirty patients underwent conservative surgery. As the adjuvant treatment, 30 patients received chemotherapy, while five patients did not receive any chemotherapy. The overall survival rate was 97.1%. One patient died of the disease. She was 13 years old with a stage IV endodermal sinus tumor. Twelve have attempted conception, and eight have achieved at least one pregnancy (66.7%).
Irrespective of the stage of the disease, conservative surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy for MGCTO can achieve a favorable outcome in terms of survival and fertility.
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research 09/2006; 32(4):416-21. · 0.94 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Many viral oncolytic approaches against cancer are based on the ability of specific viruses to replicate in tumors expressing components of the constitutively activated Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways and/or inhibited or dysregulated alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) response pathways. A major issue when considering these approaches is their applicability to tumors that lack activated Ras. To identify the effector mechanisms activated by oncolytic viruses, we investigated inhibition of proliferation of the prostate cancer line LNCap by the recombinant TR-NS1 influenza A virus, a genetically attenuated influenza A/PR8/34 virus expressing a truncated nonstructural protein (NS1) of 126 amino acids. LNCap cells lack constitutively activated MAPK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), and p38 and are resistant to death by IFN-alpha. Truncation of the NS1 protein of influenza viruses is known to result in viral attenuation due to a reduced ability of the NS1 to inhibit the IFN-alpha/beta response. Infection with TR-NS1 virus rapidly activated ERK-1 more than ERK-2 in LNCap cells. Importantly, TR-NS1 virus infection transiently inhibited cell proliferation and induced apoptosis in LNCap cells. Addition of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and interleukin 12 (IL-12) to TR-NS1 virus-infected LNCap cells (TR-NS1-LNCap) resulted in faster elimination of TR-NS1-LNCap cells compared with LNCap cells. Moreover, TR-NS1-LNCap cells induced IFN-gamma in PBMC. The levels of IFN-gamma were amplified by IL-12. TR-NS1-LNCap cells also induced tumor-lytic cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). These CTL lysed noninfected LNCap cells in a CD8-dependent manner. Activation of cellular immunity to tumor cells by viruses is an intriguing effector pathway, which should be especially significant for elimination of human tumors that lack activated Ras.
Journal of Virology 02/2006; 80(1):383-94. · 5.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: MicroRNA (miRNA) are a class of non-coding RNAs found both in normal tissues and cancer cells. The natural miRNA, which target cancer genes for transcriptional repression are still unknown. Approaches for synthetic miRNA design targeting cancer genes have not yet been established. We designed miRNAs targeting the 3' UTR (nt 4350-4372) of HER-2 proto-oncogene. One miRNA (miR-14U) was designed by introducing a mutation in the nt 14 counting from the 5' end of anti-sense RNA. Two others (miR4350-10GGA and miR4350-11AAGCU) were designed by introducing either loop-forming nucleotides in position 10 or a part of the complementary sequence of the Brd-box consensus sequence, in position 11. miR4350-10GGA was more effective than the anti-sense strand in decreasing the numbers of ovarian tumor SKOV3 cells, which over-expressed HER-2 protein. Its inhibitory effects were lower than that of corresponding double-stranded (ds) RNA4350-4372. Inhibition of HER-2 expression mediated by miRNAs was higher in cells expressing higher levels of HER-2 protein than in cells expressing lower levels of HER-2 protein. This is the first demonstration of inhibition of expression of a constitutively over-expressed tumor protein by designed synthetic miRNA and its cor-responding dsRNA targeting 3' untranslated regions in mRNA. Our results also show that measuring the effects of miRNA and dsRNA in pooled populations of tumor cells, which express various levels of target oncogenes, may reflect the survival responses of siRNA resistant tumors rather than the growth inhibitory responses of siRNA-sensitive tumors.
International Journal of Oncology 12/2005; 27(5):1299-306. · 2.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Human papillomavirus 16 (HPV16)-E6 and -E7 proteins are considered to be appropriate targets in specific immunotherapy for cervical cancer. In this study, we attempted to identify epitope peptides from the HPV16-E6 protein that have the potential to generate cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) toward human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A24+ cervical cancer. Two HPV16-E6 peptides at positions 75-83 and 91-100 effectively induced peptide-specific CTLs from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of HLA-A24+ cervical cancer patients. These HPV16-E6 peptide-induced CTLs showed cytotoxicity against HLA-A24+ and HPV16-E6 protein-expressing cervical cancer cells. Experiments with blocking antibodies and cold inhibition targets revealed that the cytotoxicity was mainly dependent on peptide-specific and CD8+ T cells. In addition, based on our observation that induction of immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactive to administered CTL-directed peptides is correlated with clinical responses, we attempted to detect IgG reactive to HPV16-E6 peptides in the plasma of cancer patients. As a result, IgGs reactive to the HPV16-E691-100 peptide were detected in 4 of 12 cervical cancer patients. These results indicate that these HPV16-E6-derived peptides are good candidates in peptide-based immunotherapy for HLA-A24+ cervical cancer patients.
International Journal of Oncology 12/2005; 27(5):1371-9. · 2.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Antiidiotypic antibodies have been and are being used for cancer immunotherapy based on the rationale that Ab2 carrying an "internal image" of the corresponding tumor antigen can induce tumor antigen-specific antibodies (i.e., Ab3 and inhibit tumor growth). Recent evidence indicates that Ab2 also induces cellular responses by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. This finding has raised the question of where the short peptides, which express CD8+ T-cell-defined epitopes, are located and their relationship with the tumor antigen. We found that two of the four known Ab2 associated with tumor antigen, with known amino acid sequence, express unique NH2-terminal V(H) sequences which precede the framework regions. Both the unique and the shared NH2-terminal V(H) sequences are nested MHC class I antigen-binding peptides. These peptides were highly homologous with peptides from corresponding tumor antigen (carcinoembryonic antigen, CD55, and human high molecular weight melanoma-associated antigen) but differed from the tumor antigen peptides by the presence of the side chain known to mediate stronger forces of interaction with other atoms. The presence of candidate CTL epitopes in NH2-terminal V(H) of Ab2 homologous with tumor antigen may be important for the development of novel immunotherapeutic strategies for cancer.
Cancer Research 08/2005; 65(14):6001-4. · 7.86 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: CD8(+) cells expressing high numbers of TCR per cell (TCR(hi)) are considered important mediators of antitumor effects. To understand the relationship between TCR density and antigen affinity for TCR in the outcome of stimulation with antigen and differentiation of CTL recognizing tumor antigen, we analyzed perforin induction in ovarian tumor-associated lymphocytes in response to the smallest possible changes in the atomic forces of interaction between antigen and TCR. Stimulating undifferentiated, apoptosis-resistant CD8(+) cells expressing high levels of E75-TCR (TCR(hi)) with variants of the CTL epitope E75, HER-2 (369-377), induced their stepwise differentiation, first to IFN-gamma(+) Perf(-) and to TCR(hi) IFN-gamma(+) Perf(+) cells. Blocking caspase-9 activation at antigen stimulation also enhanced the generation of TCR(hi) Perf(hi) cells, demonstrating that TCR density dictated the pathway of death activated by stimulation with the same agonist. Expansion and differentiation of TCR(hi) Perf(+) CTL required an agonist of optimal CH(2) side chain length, which in this study was equal to two CH(2) groups appended to E75 at the Gly(4) position. Side chains one CH(2) shorter or longer than optimal were either less stimulatory or induced death of TCR(hi) Perf(+) cells. Differentiation of TCR(hi) CD8(+) cells can be finely tuned by synthetic amino acids in the peptide, whose side chains induce small increments in the affinity of the antigen for TCR below the affinity which induce apoptosis.
Cancer Research 05/2005; 65(7):2930-7. · 7.86 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: HLA-A2-restricted CTLs, which lysed high molecular weight (HMW)-melanoma-associated antigen (MAA)(+) melanoma cells, were induced in patients with melanoma immunized with MELIMMUNE, a combination of the murine anti-idiotypic (anti-id) monoclonal antibodies (mAb) MEL-2 and MF11-30 (MW Pride et al., Clin Cancer Res 1998;4:2363.). In the present study we investigated whether CTL epitopes are present in anti-id mAb MF-11-30 and activate T cells to recognize HMW-MAA on melanoma cells. One candidate epitope in the mAb MF11-30 VH chain, VH (3-11), was selected based on the presence of HLA-A2 anchor residues and partial homology with the HMW-MAA epitope, HMW-MAA (76-84). Lymphocytes from HLA-A2(+)-immunized patients proliferated to VH (3-11) peptide and to a variant HMW-MAA peptide to a significantly greater extent than autologous lymphocytes stimulated with an irrelevant peptide and lymphocytes from nonimmunized patients. No proliferative response was detected to the wild-type HMW-MAA peptide (76-84). Significant increase in IFN-gamma production but not in interleukin 10 production in response to VH (3-11) and to variant HMW-MAA peptide (76-84) was observed in lymphocytes from the immunized patients. Stimulation of lymphocytes from HLA-A2(+) patients with the two peptides induced CTL, which lysed HMW-MAA(+)/HLA-A2(+) A375SM melanoma cells. This is the first report documenting the presence of immunogenic peptides in a murine anti-id mAb for a defined epitope expressed by a human melanoma-associated antigen. These results may be relevant for development of novel vaccines based on homology between anti-id mAb and tumor-associated antigen amino acid sequences.
Cancer Research 09/2004; 64(15):5481-8. · 7.86 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Breast cancer metastasizes from the primary site to the axillary lymph nodes (LN). It is unknown whether tumor metastasis abolishes or enhances the ability of LN cells to develop a specific response to the Ag expressed by the tumor, and whether an immune response to the same Ag is present in the tumor-free LN. We stimulated lymphocytes from a metastasis negative (Met-) and a metastasis positive (Met+) LN, invaded by a HER-2+ tumor, from the same patient, with HER-2 peptides E75 (369-377) and G89 (776-778). E75 define a CTL epitope presented by HLA-A2, while G89 define a CD4+ cell recognized epitope. Met- LN responded to E75+G89 with higher expansion of E75 TCR+ CD45RO+ CCR7- (CCR7-) and E75-TCR+ CD45RO+ CCR7+ (CCR7+) cells than Met+ LN. Stimulation with E75+G89 induced a significant increase in CCR7+ cells in Met- LN compared with Met+ LN. The levels of IFN-alpha and IL-15 were higher in Met- LN cultures stimulated with E75+G89 than in Met+ LN cultures. This increase did not correlate with the levels of induction of IFN-gamma, IL-4, and IL-10. The finding of higher expansion of Ag specific CCR7+ cells and of differentiation to CCR7- cells, which define the TCM and TEM subsets respectively, in Met- LN, by G89 is novel for tumor systems. This may have implications for preventative vaccination strategies for breast and ovarian cancer.
International Journal of Oncology 07/2004; 24(6):1413-8. · 2.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Many clinical studies have been undertaken to assess the therapeutic potential of vaccination and have included a large variety of cancer immunogens. Most of these studies involved patients with metastatic cancer, which is characterized by the most aggressive malignant cells, the longest-lasting disease, and the failure of all standard cytotoxic treatments. The presence of tumor over long periods and the toxicity of previous treatments tend to negatively affect immune responsiveness to tumor antigens presented by the vaccine. In this review, we analyze the ability of past and current vaccine therapies to induce clinical responses in breast cancer. To date, clinical responses have been observed by using vaccines targeting HER-2/neu protein, human telomerase reverse transcriptase, carcinoembryonic antigen, and carbohydrate antigen given after stem cell rescue. The review concludes with a discussion of possible future directions for vaccine development and applications.
Clinical Cancer Research 09/2003; 9(9):3222-34. · 7.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The development of cancer vaccines requires approaches to induce expansion and functional differentiation of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) effectors which posses cytolytic capability and produce cytokines. Efficient induction of such cells is hindered by the poor immunogenicity of tumor antigens and by the poor transduction efficiency of dendritic cells (DCs) with current nonreplicating vectors. We have investigated the use of influenza A virus, a potent viral inducer of CTLs, as a vector expressing the immunodominant HER-2 CTL epitope KIF (E75). For this purpose, an attenuated influenza A/PR8/34 virus with a truncated nonstructural (NS1) gene was generated containing the E75 epitope in its neuraminidase protein (KIF-NS virus). Stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy donors and of tumor-associated lymphocytes from ovarian and breast cancer patients with DCs infected with KIF-NS virus (KIF-NS DC) induced CTLs that specifically recognized the peptide KIF and HER-2-expressing tumors in cytotoxicity assays and secreted gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) and interleukin-2 at recall with peptide. Priming with KIF-NS DCs increased the number of E75(+) CD45RO(+) cells by more than 10-fold compared to nonstimulated cells. In addition, KIF-NS virus induced high levels of IFN-alpha in DCs. This is the first report demonstrating induction of human epitope-specific CTLs against a tumor-associated antigen with a live attenuated recombinant influenza virus vector. Such vectors may provide a novel approach for tumor antigen delivery, lymphocyte activation, and differentiation in human cancer vaccine development.
Journal of Virology 08/2003; 77(13):7411-24. · 5.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We investigated tumor antigens recognized by HLA-A2402-restricted CTLs established from T cells infiltrating into lung adenocarcinoma. We report here three newly identified tumor antigen genes, including one unreported gene, temporarily referred to as clone 83, and two known genes, BTB domain containing 2 (BTBD2) and hairpin-binding protein. These genes were preferentially expressed in most of the cell lines of lung cancer and also of ovarian cancer and renal cell carcinoma at the mRNA level. The expression of these genes was confirmed in lung and other cancer tissue specimens. In normal tissues, clone 83 was expressed only in the colon, and hairpin-binding protein was not expressed at all, whereas BTBD2 was ubiquitously expressed. Clone 83, BTBD2, and hairpin-binding protein encoded two, one, and one epitope peptides that can be recognized by HLA-A2402-restricted CTLs, respectively. These epitope peptides possessed the ability to induce HLA-A24-restricted tumor-specific CTLs after in vitro stimulation in a culture of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with lung cancer. These results suggest that these genes and peptides are potential candidates for cancer vaccines in HLA-A24(+) patients with lung cancer.
Cancer Research 07/2003; 63(11):2829-35. · 7.86 Impact Factor
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Agapito Castilleja,
Darrick Carter,
Clay L Efferson,
Nancy E Ward, Kouichiro Kawano,
Bryan Fisk,
Andrzej P Kudelka,
David M Gershenson,
James L Murray,
Catherine A O'Brian,
Constantin G Ioannides
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ABSTRACT: To design side chain variants for modulation of immunogenicity, we modeled the complex of the HLA-A2 molecule with an immunodominant peptide, E75, from the HER-2/neu protooncogene protein recognized by CTL. We identified the side chain orientation of E75. We modified E75 at the central Ser(5) (E75 wild-type), which points upward, by removing successively the HO (variant S5A) and the CH2-OH (variant S5G). Replacement of the OH with an aminopropyl (CH2)3-NH3 (variant S5K) maintained a similar upward orientation of the side chain. S5A and S5G were stronger stimulators while S5K was a weaker stimulator than E75 for induction of lytic function, indicating that the OH group and its extension hindered TCR activation. S5K-CTL survived longer than did CTL induced by E75 and the variants S5A and S5G, which became apoptotic after restimulation with the inducer. S5K-CTL also recognized E75 endogenously presented by the tumor by IFN-gamma production and specific cytolysis. S5K-CTL expanded at stimulation with E75 or with E75 plus agonistic anti-Fas mAb. Compared with S5K-CTL that had been restimulated with the inducer S5K, S5K-CTL stimulated with wild-type E75 expressed higher levels of E75(+) TCR and BCL-2. Activation of human tumor-reactive CTL by weaker agonists than the nominal Ag, followed by expansion with the nominal Ag, is a novel approach to antitumor CTL development. Fine tuning of activation of tumor-reactive CTL by weak agonists, designed by molecular modeling, may circumvent cell death or tolerization induced by tumor Ag, and thus, may provide a novel approach to the rational design of human cancer vaccines.
The Journal of Immunology 11/2002; 169(7):3545-54. · 5.79 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Development of cancer vaccines requires approaches to induce expansion and functional differentiation of tumor antigen-specific effector and memory cells. The later are particularly relevant for prevention of disease relapse. Efficient induction of memory cells is hindered by the lack of information about the relationship between TCR stimulation and the cytokines required for Ag-specific memory CD8+ cells and proliferation and survival. Since viruses are known to induce memory T cells, an attenuated influenza A/PR8/34 virus with a truncated nonstructural (NS1) gene was generated containing the HER-2 CTL E75 epitope in its neuraminidase protein (KIF-NS virus). Stimulation of PBMC from healthy donors and of tumor-associated lymphocytes (TAL) from ovarian cancer patients with dendritic cells (DC) infected with KIF-NS (KIF-NS-DC), induced higher numbers of immediate memory effector CD8+ CD44hi CD122hi cells, expressing TCR specific for E75 (E75-TCR) than stimulation with peptide E75. Survival of CD44hi CD122hi cells was dependent on the levels of TCR; cells expressing lower levels of E75-TCR (MFI: 10(2)-10(3)) survived better in IL-2 while cells expressing high levels of TCR (MFI: 10(3)-10(4)) survived better in IL-15. This is the first report demonstrating induction of human Ag-specific memory CD8+ cells against a human tumor-antigen using a live attenuated recombinant influenza virus vector. Such vectors may provide a novel approach for preventive immunity in human cancer vaccine development.
Anticancer research 25(2A):715-24. · 1.73 Impact Factor