Trial watch: Peptide-based vaccines in anticancer therapy
Article 2018 en
Authors
LB
Lucillia Bezu
OK
Oliver Kepp
GC
Giulia Cerrato
Abstract
1 min read
Peptide-based anticancer vaccination aims at stimulating an immune response against one or multiple tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) following immunization with purified, recombinant or synthetically engineered epitopes. Despite high expectations, the peptide-based vaccines that have been explored in the clinic so far had limited therapeutic activity, largely due to cancer cell-intrinsic alterations that minimize antigenicity and/or changes in the tumor microenvironment that foster immunosuppression. Several strategies have been developed to overcome such limitations, including the use of immunostimulatory adjuvants, the co-treatment with cytotoxic anticancer therapies that enable the coordinated release of damage-associated molecular patterns, and the concomitant blockade of immune checkpoints. Personalized peptide-based vaccines are also being explored for therapeutic activity in the clinic. Here, we review recent preclinical and clinical progress in the use of peptide-based vaccines as anticancer therapeutics.Abbreviations: CMP: carbohydrate-mimetic peptide; CMV: cytomegalovirus; DC: dendritic cell; FDA: Food and Drug Administration; HPV: human papillomavirus; MDS: myelodysplastic syndrome; MHP: melanoma helper vaccine; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; ODD: orphan drug designation; PPV: personalized peptide vaccination; SLP: synthetic long peptide; TAA: tumor-associated antigen; TNA: tumor neoantigen
Norma Bloy, Jonathan Pol, Fernando Aranda, Alexander Eggermont, Isabelle Cremer, Wolf H. Fridman, Jitka Fučíková, Jérôme Galon, Éric Tartour, Radek Špíšek, Madhav V. Dhodapkar, Laurence Zitvogel, Guido Guido Kroemer, Lorenzo Galluzzi
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