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Clinical Trial
. 2004 May 15;22(10):1916-25.
doi: 10.1200/JCO.2004.09.005.

Effect of dose on immune response in patients vaccinated with an her-2/neu intracellular domain protein--based vaccine

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Effect of dose on immune response in patients vaccinated with an her-2/neu intracellular domain protein--based vaccine

Mary L Disis et al. J Clin Oncol. .

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the safety of an HER-2/neu intracellular domain (ICD) protein vaccine and to estimate whether vaccine dose impacts immunogenicity.

Patients and methods: Twenty-nine patients with HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast or ovarian cancer and with no evidence of disease after standard therapy received a low- (25 microg), intermediate- (150 microg), or high-dose (900 microg) HER-2/neu ICD protein vaccine. The vaccine was administered intradermally, monthly for 6 months, with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor as an adjuvant. Toxicity and both cellular and humoral HER-2/neu-specific immunity was evaluated.

Results: The vaccine was well tolerated. The majority of patients (89%) developed HER-2/neu ICD-specific T-cell immunity. The dose of vaccine did not predict the magnitude of the T-cell response. The majority of patients (82%) also developed HER-2/neu-specific immunoglobulin G antibody immunity. Vaccine dose did not predict magnitude or avidity of the HER-2/neu-specific humoral immune response. Time to development of detectable HER-2/neu-specific immunity, however, was significantly earlier for the high- versus low-dose vaccine group (P =.003). Over half the patients retained HER-2/neu-specific T-cell immunity 9 to 12 months after immunizations had ended.

Conclusion: The HER-2/neu ICD protein vaccine was well tolerated and effective in eliciting HER-2/neu-specific T-cell and antibody immunity in the majority of breast and ovarian cancer patients who completed the vaccine regimen. Although the dose of vaccine did not impact the magnitude of T-cell or antibody immunity elicited, patients receiving the highest dose developed HER-2/neu-specific immunity more rapidly than those who received the lowest dose.

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