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Abstract LB048: An adjuvant personalized neoantigen peptide vaccine for the treatment of malignancies (PGV-001)
Background: The majority of novel cancer immunotherapies rely on adequate priming of T cells to tumor-specific neoantigens, which is believed to be lacking in patients who do not respond to therapy. We developed a personalized genomic vaccine (PGV-001) in which patient-specific synthetic neoantigen...
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Published in: | Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2021-07, Vol.81 (13_Supplement), p.LB048-LB048 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background: The majority of novel cancer immunotherapies rely on adequate priming of T cells to tumor-specific neoantigens, which is believed to be lacking in patients who do not respond to therapy. We developed a personalized genomic vaccine (PGV-001) in which patient-specific synthetic neoantigen peptides (25 mer),are formulated and administered to patients with multiple cancer types in the adjuvant setting (NCT02721043). Methods: This trial enrolled patients whom had undergone curative-intent surgery (solid tumor patients) or autologous stem cell transplant (multiple myeloma patients), and for whom there was >30% chance of recurrence. Sequencing of tumor and germline DNA and RNA was performed and the OpenVax custom computation pipeline was used to identify candidate neoantigens; this platform ranks transcribed mutations using predicted MHC-I binding affinity and neoantigen abundance. A maximum of 10 peptides were synthesized per patient. Peptides were administered over the course of 27 weeks with poly-ICLC and a tetanus helper peptide. Primary objectives were to determine the safety and tolerability of vaccination, feasibility of vaccine production and administration, and immunogenicity. Results: Within 15 patients enrolled, the OpenVax pipeline identified an average of 67.1 neoantigens/patient (range 8-193), only two patients did not have adequate number of neoantigens identified to synthesize 10 peptides. 13 of the 15 patients received PGV-001, including 10 patients with solid tumor diagnoses and 3 patients with multiple myeloma, 11 of whom received all 10 doses, while 1 experienced progression of disease while on treatment. The vaccine was well tolerated, with grade 1 injection site reactions in 31% of patients, and grade 1 fever in one patient; there were no other significant adverse events. While one patient was lost to follow-up, of the remaining 12 patients the median progression-free survival from the time of their surgery or transplant of 618 days. With a mean follow-up of 925 days, 4 patients remain without evidence of disease, 4 patients are receiving subsequent lines of therapy, and 4 patients have died, though notably only two with documented recurrence of their malignancy. Initial analysis of the patient samples analyzed confirms immunogenicity. T cell responses were measured using ex vivo ELISpot and intracellular cytokine staining following expansion with neoantigen peptide libraries, both demonstrating induction of IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha |
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ISSN: | 0008-5472 1538-7445 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1538-7445.AM2021-LB048 |