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Patient-Specific Dendritic Cell Vaccines with Autologous Tumor Antigens in 72 Patients with Metastatic Melanoma
Author(s) -
Robert O. Dillman,
Andrew N. Cornforth,
Edward F. McClay,
Carol DePriest
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
melanoma management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2045-0893
pISSN - 2045-0885
DOI - 10.2217/mmt-2018-0010
Subject(s) - medicine , metastatic melanoma , melanoma , antigen , dendritic cell , immunotherapy , immunology , cancer research , immune system
Aim: Metastatic melanoma patients were treated with patient-specific vaccines consisting of autologous dendritic cells loaded with antigens from irradiated cells from short-term autologous tumor cell lines. Patients & methods: A total of 72 patients were enrolled in a single-arm Phase I/II (NCT00948480) trial or a randomized Phase II (NCT00436930). Results: Toxicity was minimal. Median overall survival (OS) was 49.4 months; 5-year OS 46%. A 5-year OS was 72% for 18 recurrent stage 3 without measurable disease when treated and 53% for 30 stage 4 without measurable disease when treated. A total of 24 patients with measurable stage 4 when treated (median of four prior therapies) had an 18.5 months median OS and 46% 2-year OS. Conclusion: This dendritic cell vaccine was associated with encouraging survival in all three clinical subsets. Clinicaltrial.gov NCT00436930 and NCT00948480.

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