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. 2011 Aug 15;129(4):832-8.
doi: 10.1002/ijc.25756. Epub 2011 Jan 7.

Gemcitabine depletes regulatory T-cells in human and mice and enhances triggering of vaccine-specific cytotoxic T-cells

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Gemcitabine depletes regulatory T-cells in human and mice and enhances triggering of vaccine-specific cytotoxic T-cells

Lorna Rettig et al. Int J Cancer. .

Erratum in

  • Int J Cancer. 2012 Apr 1;130(7):1714. Curioni, Alessandra [added]

Abstract

Particle-mediated epidermal delivery (PMED) is a potent genetic vaccination method. However, a recent report found PMED only poorly and infrequently triggered antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cells in cancer patients. Here, we show that injection of the chemotherapeutic drug Gemcitabine in mice results in improvement of the efficacy of subsequent PMED vaccination against NY-ESO-1. We found in mice and in cancer patients that administration of Gemcitabine induces a transient reduction in the percentage of regulatory T-cells among CD4-positive cells. The higher relative sensitivity of regulatory T-cells compared to other CD4-positive T-cells toward cytostatic drugs can be linked to the higher frequency of proliferating cells in the regulatory compartment compared to the nonregulatory CD4-compartment in healthy people and cancer patients. Thus, by affecting regulatory T-cells more than other lymphocyte subsets, chemotherapeutic agents can create a transient hyperimmunoreactive window. Such a window would provide an ideal timepoint to administer a vaccine expected to induce a therapeutically relevant anticancer cytotoxic T-cell response.

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