Booster vaccination of cancer patients with MAGE-A3 protein reveals long-term immunological memory or tolerance depending on priming
Open Access
- 5 February 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (5) , 1650-1655
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0707140104
Abstract
We previously reported results of a phase II trial in which recombinant MAGE-A3 protein was administered with or without adjuvant AS02B to 18 non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients after tumor resection. We found that the presence of adjuvant was essential for the development of humoral and cellular responses against selected MAGE-A3 epitopes. In our current study, 14 patients that still had no evidence of disease up to 3 years after vaccination with MAGE-A3 protein with or without adjuvant received an additional four doses of MAGE-A3 protein with adjuvant AS02B. After just one boost injection, six of seven patients originally vaccinated with MAGE-A3 protein plus adjuvant reached again their peak antibody titers against MAGE-A3 attained during the first vaccination. All seven patients subsequently developed even stronger antibody responses. Furthermore, booster vaccination widened the spectrum of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells against various new and known MAGE-A3 epitopes. In contrast, only two of seven patients originally vaccinated with MAGE-A3 protein alone developed high-titer antibodies to MAGE-A3, and all these patients showed very limited CD4+ and no CD8+ T cell reactivity, despite now receiving antigen in the presence of adjuvant. Our results underscore the importance of appropriate antigen priming using an adjuvant for generating persistent B and T cell memory and allowing typical booster responses with reimmunization. In contrast, absence of adjuvant at priming compromises further immunization attempts. These data provide an immunological rationale for vaccine design in light of recently reported favorable clinical responses in NSCLC patients after vaccination with MAGE-A3 protein plus adjuvant AS02B.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phase II Clinical Trial of the Epothilone B Analog, Ixabepilone, in Patients With Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Whose Tumors Have Failed First-Line Platinum-Based ChemotherapyJournal of Clinical Oncology, 2007
- Vaccination with NY-ESO-1 protein and CpG in Montanide induces integrated antibody/Th1 responses and CD8 T cells through cross-primingProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- HER2-Specific T-Cell Immune Responses in Patients Vaccinated with Truncated HER2 Protein Complexed with Nanogels of Cholesteryl PullulanClinical Cancer Research, 2006
- T cell memory and protective immunity by vaccination: is more better?Trends in Immunology, 2006
- Cancer-testis antigens are commonly expressed in multiple myeloma and induce systemic immunity following allogeneic stem cell transplantationBlood, 2006
- Regulatory T cells, tumour immunity and immunotherapyNature Reviews Immunology, 2006
- Cancer-Testis Genes Are Coordinately Expressed and Are Markers of Poor Outcome in Non–Small Cell Lung CancerClinical Cancer Research, 2005
- Phase 1/2 study of subcutaneous and intradermal immunization with a recombinant MAGE-3 protein in patients with detectable metastatic melanomaInternational Journal of Cancer, 2005
- Human Autologous Tumor-Specific T-Cell Responses Induced by Liposomal Delivery of a Lymphoma AntigenClinical Cancer Research, 2004
- gp100209–2M Peptide Immunization of Human Lymphocyte Antigen-A2+ Stage I-III Melanoma Patients Induces Significant Increase in Antigen-Specific Effector and Long-Term Memory CD8+ T CellsClinical Cancer Research, 2004