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Bioactivity of Autologous Irradiated Renal Cell Carcinoma Vaccines Generated by ex Vivo Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-stimulating Factor Gene Transfer

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TLDR
This Phase I study demonstrated the feasibility, safety, and bioactivity of an autologous GM-CSF gene-transduced tumor vaccine for RCC patients.
Abstract
Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene-transduced, irradiated tumor vaccines induce potent, T-cell-mediated antitumor immune responses in preclinical models. We report the initial results of a Phase I trial evaluating this strategy for safety and the induction of immune responses in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Patients were treated in a randomized, double-blind dose-escalation study with equivalent doses of autologous, irradiated RCC vaccine cells with or without ex vivo human GM-CSF gene transfer. The replication-defective retroviral vector MFG was used for GM-CSF gene transfer. No dose-limiting toxicities were encountered in 16 fully evaluable patients. GM-CSF gene-transduced vaccines were equivalent in toxicity to nontransduced vaccines up to the feasible limits of autologous tumor vaccine yield. No evidence of autoimmune disease was observed. Biopsies of intradermal sites of injection with GM-CSF gene-transduced vaccines contained distinctive macrophage, dendritic cell, eosinophil, neutrophil, and T-cell infiltrates similar to those observed in preclinical models of efficacy. Histological analysis of delayed-type hypersensitivity responses in patients vaccinated with GM-CSF-transduced vaccines demonstrated an intense eosinophil infiltrate that was not observed in patients who received nontransduced vaccines. An objective partial response was observed in a patient treated with GM-CSF gene-transduced vaccine who displayed the largest delayed-type hypersensitivity conversion. No replication-competent retrovirus was detected in vaccinated patients. This Phase I study demonstrated the feasibility, safety, and bioactivity of an autologous GM-CSF gene-transduced tumor vaccine for RCC patients.

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Review Immune based therapies in cancer

C. Krüger, +1 more
TL;DR: This review will summarize the recent developments in tumor immunotherapy as well as the clinical trials addressing novel immunotherapeutic approaches to cancer.
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MCA106 fibrosarcoma cells transduced with granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor are not superior to the wild-type cells in suppressing the growth of hepatic metastases.

TL;DR: Investigating the vaccine potential of GM‐CSF–transduced MCA106 fibrosarcoma (MCA‐GMCSF) cells in the C57BL/6 (B6) murine hepatic metastasis model augments the immune response against established tumors and protects against tumor challenges.
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Tumor vaccine strategies after allogeneic T-cell depleted bone marrow transplantation

TL;DR: Estes resultados demonstram that a vacinacao de doadores e pacientes pode estimular os efeitos anti-tumorais sem a inducao da doenca do enxerto contra o hospedeiro e esta estrategia tem importantes implicacoes no tratamento de pacients com tumores solidos.
Book ChapterDOI

Renal Cancer Vaccines

TL;DR: It is presumed from observations that the immune system plays a key role in cases of spontaneous regression and durable remissions of RCC.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Generation of large numbers of dendritic cells from mouse bone marrow cultures supplemented with granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor.

TL;DR: The methodology for inducing dendritic cell growth that was recently described for mouse blood now has been modified to MHC class II- negative precursors in marrow, and this feature should prove useful for future molecular and clinical studies of this otherwise trace cell type.
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A gene encoding an antigen recognized by cytolytic T lymphocytes on a human melanoma

TL;DR: In this paper, a gene was identified that directed the expression of antigen MZ2-E on a human melanoma cell line, which belongs to a family of at least three genes.
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Vaccination with Irradiated Tumor Cells Engineered to Secrete Murine Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor Stimulates Potent, Specific, and Long-Lasting Anti-Tumor Immunity

TL;DR: The results have important implications for the clinical use of genetically modified tumor cells as therapeutic cancer vaccines and the levels of anti-tumor immunity reported previously in cytokine gene transfer studies involving live, transduced cells could be achieved through the use of irradiated cells alone.
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The Basic Science of Gene Therapy

TL;DR: A large number of key technical issues need to be resolved before gene therapy can be safely and effectively applied in the clinic, and future technological developments will be critical for the successful practice of gene therapy.
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Role of bone marrow-derived cells in presenting MHC class I-restricted tumor antigens

TL;DR: MHC class I-restricted antigens are efficiently transferred in vivo to bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting cells, which suggests that human leukocyte antigen matching may be less critical in the application of tumor vaccines than previously thought.
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