Premium
Phase I study of intranodal delivery of a plasmid DNA vaccine for patients with Stage IV melanoma
Author(s) -
Tagawa Scott T.,
Lee Peter,
Snively Jolie,
Boswell William,
Ounpraseuth Song,
Lee Sandra,
Hickingbottom Barbara,
Smith John,
Johnson Denise,
Weber Jeffrey S.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.11462
Subject(s) - medicine , lymph node , melanoma , groin , erythema , elispot , immune system , toxicity , antigen , immunology , immunotherapy , gastroenterology , surgery , t cell , cancer research
Abstract BACKGROUND Based on the likelihood of transfecting large numbers of local antigen‐presenting cells, a Phase I study in patients with Stage IV melanoma was conducted to determine the practicality, toxicity of, and immune responses to repeated infusions into a groin lymph node of escalating doses of a DNA plasmid encoding tyrosinase epitopes. METHODS Cohorts of 8 patients each received 200 μg, 400 μg, or 800 μg of DNA intranodally by pump over 96 hours every 14 days for 4 cycles. Blood was collected for immunologic assays and to measure plasmid in serum prior to treatment, 4 weeks later, and 8 weeks later. Scans and X‐rays were performed at baseline and after 8 weeks. RESULTS Treatment was tolerated well, with only five patients demonstrating Grade 1–2 toxicity. Vaccine delivery by 96‐hour infusions of plasmid into a groin lymph node resulted in only 1 episode of catheter leakage in 107 cannulations. Detection of plasmid in serum was rare and transient in two patients. Immune responses by peptide‐tetramer assay to tyrosinase 207–216 were detected in 11 of 26 patients. No clinical responses were seen. Survival of the heavily pretreated patients on this trial was unexpectedly long, with 16 of 26 patients alive at a median follow‐up of 12 months. CONCLUSIONS Infusion of a DNA plasmid vaccine into a groin lymph node was practical and well tolerated. Immune responses to a novel tyrosinase epitope were noted. Overall survival in this trial of heavily pretreated patients was unexpectedly long, with 16 of 26 patients alive after a follow‐up of 12 months, favoring immune responders. Cancer 2003;98:144–54. © 2003 American Cancer Society.