Clinical studies suggest that treatment with vaccines comprised of idiotype protein may be associated with improved clinical outcome in follicular lymphoma patients. The time-consuming process required to generate patient-specific vaccines is a major limitation, however. Here we report results of a pilot clinical trial with a novel autologous, tumor-derived proteoliposome vaccine formulation that could be rapidly produced within a single day. Vaccination was safe, induced autologous tumor-specific type 1 cytokine responses in 5 out of 10 follicular lymphoma patients, and was associated with induction of a sustained complete response in one patient. Other patients had large tumor burdens and progressed after a median duration of 8 months. These results suggest that further testing of this vaccine formulation, particularly in the setting of minimal disease, is warranted. Furthermore, the proteoliposome formulation may provide a model for vaccine development for other human cancers, for which tumor-associated antigens need not be defined. © 2007 by The American Society of Hematology.
CITATION STYLE
Neelapu, S. S., Gause, B. L., Harvey, L., Lee, S. T., Frye, A. R., Horton, J., … Kwak, L. W. (2007). A novel proteoliposomal vaccine induces antitumor immunity against follicular lymphoma. Blood, 109(12), 5160–5163. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2006-12-063594
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