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Meta-Analysis
. 2011 Jan-Feb:7 Suppl:115-9.
doi: 10.4161/hv.7.0.14573. Epub 2011 Jan 1.

Therapeutic vaccination for cancer immunotherapy: antigen selection and clinical responses

Affiliations
Meta-Analysis

Therapeutic vaccination for cancer immunotherapy: antigen selection and clinical responses

Astrid Geldmacher et al. Hum Vaccin. 2011 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Background: Because of its high specificity and low toxicity therapeutic vaccination is considered a desirable treatment for cancer. So far, however, the results of cancer vaccination trials have been disappointing, which is often attributed to the problem identifying appropriate vaccine antigens. Tumorassociated antigens are mostly autoantigens and therefore expected to be subject to immunosuppressive mechanisms. Cancer-testis antigens are the most prominent exception as, still being self, they are physiologically only expressed in immunopriviledged tissues and should therefore not induce autotolerance. This leads to the widely accepted hypothesis that cancer-testis antigens should be more efficient inducers of anti-tumor cellular immune responses than differentiation antigens. Aim of the study was to test this hypothesis by evaluating the published reports on clinical therapeutic vaccination trials for the objective clinical response rates to vaccination with cancer testis antigen vs. differentiation antigens.

Approach: The results of vaccination clinical trials with cancer testis and/or differentiation antigens published in literature and databanks were analyzed for clinical outcome versus vaccine antigens. 21 publications on cancer testis antigen-based trials in which clinical outcome was reported according to WHO or RECIST were identified and analyzed.

Results: The rate of objective responses to cancer testis antigen vaccines in 239 patients was 3.8% and for the 235 patients vaccinated with cancer testis plus 3 differentiation antigens 4.3% compared to 2.6% for the 496 patients vaccinated with differentiation antigens alone.

Conclusions: Cancer testis antigen-based vaccines seem slightly superior over vaccines based on differentiation antigens providing support for the hypothesis.

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