Adjuvant therapy
of renal cell carcinoma patients with an autologous tumor cell
lysate vaccine: a 5-year follow-up analysis.
Department of Urology, St. Georg
Hospital Leipzig, Delitzscher Str. 141, 04129 Leipzig, Germany.
repi@surfEU.de
BACKGROUND:
Non-metastasized renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is associated with
postoperative progression in 1 out of 3 patients. However, no
adjuvant therapy after radical nephrectomy has been established.
We investigated the impact of an adjuvant autologous tumor cell
lysate vaccination on the 5-year survival rates of patients
with non-metastasized RCC.
PATIENTS
AND METHODS: Between 1990 and 1995, a total of 360 patients
with RCC underwent a radical nephrectomy at the St. Georg Hospital
Leipzig, Germany. There were 236 patients with RCC stages T2N0M0
or T3N0M0. Out of this group, 148 consecutive patients received
an adjuvant autologous tumor cell lysate vaccine (vaccine group,
72 patients with T2N0M0 and 76 patients with T3N0M0), while
the remaining 88 patients had no adjuvant therapy (control group,
52 patients with T2N0M0 and 36 patients with T3N0M0). Both groups
were comparable for parameters such as age, sex, tumor localization
and size, and Störkel-score (p > 0.05 for each parameter;
Chi-Square test and Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test).
RESULTS:
For RCC stage T2N0M0, the 5-year progression-free survival rate
in the control group was 65.3% compared to 84.6% in the vaccine
group (p = 0.0023, log-rank test). The 5-year overall survival
was 71.4% in the control group compared to 86% in the vaccine
group (p = 0.0059, log-rank test). Patients with RCC stage T3N0M0
in the vaccine group demonstrated a clear advantage in terms
of 5-year overall survival (77.5% vs. 25% in the control group,
p < 0.0001, log-rank test) and 5-year progression-free survival
(68.2% in the vaccine group vs. 19.4% in the control group,
p < 0.0001, log-rank test).
CONCLUSION:
Adjuvant autologous tumor cell lysate vaccination may improve
the outcome of patients with non-metastasized RCC
after radical nephrectomy. A prospective randomized and multicenter
phase III trial was started in 1997 to confirm these results.
PMID:
12820332 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Link
Adjuvant autologous tumour
cell-lysate vaccine versus no adjuvant treatment in patients
with M0 renal cell carcinoma after radical nephrectomy: 3-year
interim analysis of a German multicentre phase-III trial.
Department
of Urology, University of Lübeck Medical School, Lübeck, Germany.
doehn@medinf.mu-luebeck.de
Even
M0 RCC is associated with tumour progression in approximately
30% of all patients after radical nephrectomy. Nevertheless,
no effective adjuvant treatment after radical nephrectomy
has been established. In a multicentre phase-III trial we
investigated the impact of an adjuvant autologous tumour cell-lysate
vaccination on the progression-free survival of patients with
M0 RCC after radical nephrectomy. Between January 1997 and
August 1998 a total of 558 patients with a renal tumour were
enrolled at 55 different centres (study group) in Germany.
Prior to radical nephrectomy all patients were centrally randomized
(Quintiles Germany) to either receive an adjuvant autologous
tumour cell-lysate vaccine (6 applications at 4-week intervals
after radical nephrectomy) or to receive no adjuvant treatment
(control group) after radical nephrectomy. All patients were
evaluated following standardized diagnostic investigations
at 6-month intervals. Following the inclusion criteria (RCC
stages pT2-3bpN0-3M0, TNM-classification, UICC 1993), 365
patients were evaluable for the 3-year progression-free survival
analysis. There were 240 patients with stage pT2pN0M0 (104
in the vaccine group and 136 patients in the control group)
and 89 patients with stage pT3pN0M0 (46 in the vaccine group
and 43 patients in the control group). The remaining 36 patients
had positive lymph nodes. The trial was performed according
to ICH-GCP guidelines.
The
3-year progression-free survival rate for all tumour stages
was 84.7% in the vaccine group and 80.9% in the control group.
Patients
with RCC stage pT3pN0-3M0 in the vaccine group demonstrated
an advantage (74.4% in the vaccine group vs 65.9% in the control
group). For RCC stage pT2pN0-3M0 the 3-year progression-free
survival rate in the vaccine group was 89.7% compared to 85.7%
in the control group. Follow-up of all patients enrolled in
this trial is ongoing. This is the first randomized trial
indicating a benefit from an adjuvant vaccination in patients
with M0 RCC after radical nephrectomy. The
advantage in terms of progression-free survival was more pronounced
in patients with T3-tumours. However, it must be
emphasized that the results of the final study report (2003)
must be awaited before definite recommendations can be made.
PMID:
12779015 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Link
Adjuvant autologous
renal tumour cell vaccine and risk of tumour progression in patients
with renal-cell carcinoma after radical nephrectomy: phase III,
randomised controlled trial.
Jocham D,
Richter A,
Hoffmann L,
Iwig K,
Fahlenkamp D,
Zakrzewski G,
Schmitt E,
Dannenberg T,
Lehmacher W,
von Wietersheim J,
Doehn C.
Department
of Urology, University of Lübeck Medical School, Ratzeburger Allee
160, 23538 Lübeck, Germany. Prof.Jocham.MUL@t-online.de
BACKGROUND:
Organ-confined renal-cell carcinoma is associated with tumour
progression in up to 50% of patients after radical nephrectomy.
At present, no effective adjuvant treatment is established. We
aimed to investigate the effect of an autologous renal tumour
cell vaccine on risk of tumour progression in patients with stage
pT2-3b pN0-3 M0 renal-cell carcinoma.
METHODS:
Between January, 1997, and September, 1998, 558 patients with
a renal tumour scheduled for radical nephrectomy were enrolled
at 55 institutions in Germany. Before surgery, all patients were
centrally randomised to receive autologous renal tumour cell vaccine
(six intradermal applications at 4-week intervals postoperatively;
vaccine group) or no adjuvant treatment (control group). The primary
endpoint of the trial was to reduce the risk of tumour progression,
defined as progression or death. All patients were assessed after
standardised diagnostic investigations at 6-month intervals for
a minimum of 4.5 years.
FINDINGS:
By preoperative and postoperative inclusion criteria, 379
patients were assessable for the intention-to-treat analysis.
At 5-year and 70-month follow-up, the hazard ratios for tumour
progression were 1.58 (95% CI 1.05-2.37) and 1.59 (1.07-2.36),
respectively, in favour of the vaccine group (p=0.0204, log-rank
test). 5-year and 70-month progression-free survival rates were
77.4% and 72%, respectively, in the vaccine group and 67.8% and
59.3%, respectively, in the control group. The vaccine was well
tolerated, with only 12 adverse events associated with
the treatment.
INTERPRETATION:
Adjuvant treatment with autologous renal tumour cell vaccine in
patients with renal-cell carcinoma after radical nephrectomy
seems to be beneficial and can be considered in patients
undergoing radical nephrectomy due to organ-confined renal-cell
carcinoma of more than 2.5 cm in diameter.
PMID:
14987883 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Link
Treatment of kidney
cancer with autologous tumor cell vaccines of short-term cell
lines derived from renal cell carcinoma.
Hoag Cancer Center, One Hoag Drive,
Building 41, Newport Beach, California 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
BACKGROUND:
We established short-term cultures of autologous tumors from
patients with renal carcinoma for use as active specific immunotherapy
(i.e., autologous vaccine).
METHODS:
Between 9/91 and 9/99 the cell biology laboratory of the Hoag
Cancer Center received 69 kidney tumor samples that had been
surgically excised, including 43 primary tumors and 26 metastatic
lesions. Efforts were made to establish short-term tumor cell
cultures to use as autologous tumor cell vaccines. Prior to
treatment, patients underwent a baseline skin test for delayed
tumor hypersensitivity (DTH) and then received s.c. injections
of 10 million irradiated tumor cells that were given with various
adjuvants weekly x3 and then monthly x5.
RESULTS:
Cell lines were established for 55/69 patients (80%) including
36/43 (84%) from primary tumors and 19/26 (73%) from distant
metastases. Vaccines were prepared for 41 patients; 27 were
treated. At the time of this analysis, follow up data was available
for 26 patients with a median follow up > 5 years. Treatment
was well-tolerated. Of 10 patients who had no evident disease
at the time of treatment, nine were alive 1-8 years later; 5/8
had conversion of their DTH test from negative to positive.
For 16 patients with measurable metastatic disease at the time
of treatment, there were no objective tumor responses; their
median survival was 5.0 months. Among these 16 patients, only
1/8 DTH tests converted, but three had a positive baseline DTH
test; one was previously treated with interleukin-2 and tumor
infiltrating lymphocytes and two others were previously treated
with autolymphocyte therapy.
CONCLUSIONS:
Vaccine therapy with short-term cultures of autologous tumor
cells is feasible, well-tolerated and
associated with conversion of DTH and long-term survival in
patients who are free of disease at the time treatment is initiated.
However, significant anti-tumor responses were not seen in patients
with measurable disease at the time vaccine treatment was initiated.
PMID:
11279797 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Irradiated cells
from autologous tumor cell lines as patient-specific vaccine
therapy in 125 patients with metastatic cancer: induction of
delayed-type hypersensitivity to autologous tumor is associated
with improved survival.
Hoag Cancer Center, One Hoag Drive,
Building 41, Newport Beach, CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
OBJECTIVE:
We established short-term cultures of pure tumor cells for use
as autologous tumor cell vaccines in an effort to study the
effects of patients-specific immunotherapy.
PATIENTS
AND METHODS: Surgically resected fresh tumor was obtained
from patients with metastatic cancer. Successful tumor cell
lines (5 x 10(7)) were expanded to 10(8) cells, irradiated,
and cryopreserved for clinical use. Following a baseline test
of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to an i.d. injection
of 10(6) irradiated autologous tumor cells, patients received
3 weekly s.c. injections of 10(7) cells, had a repeat DTH test
at week-4, then received monthly vaccinations for 5 months.
A positive DTH test was defined as > or = 10 mm induration;
survival was determined from the first DTH test.
RESULTS:
Short-term cell lines were successfully established for 299/695
patients (43%). Vaccines were prepared for 231 patients, 142
of whom were treated, and 125 had a baseline DTH test recorded.
Median follow up at the time of analysis was greater than 5
years. There was no difference in survival for any of the following:
gender, age > 50 years, melanoma histology, anergy to common
recall antigens or baseline DTH test result. Only 17 patients
had a positive DTH at baseline (14%), but DTH converted from
negative to positive in 31/80 (39%) of those who were tested,
and in 31/108 (29%) of all patients (intent-to-convert analysis).
For the 48 patients who were DTH-positive at entry, or converted
to DTH-positive, the median survival was 30.5 months and 5-year
survival 41% compared to 11.4 months and 9% 5-year survival
for 77 patients whose DTH was never positive (P2 = 0.003). However,
survival was even better for patients whose DTH test converted
to positive compared to patients who were DTH-positive at baseline
(median 37.5 vs 11.9 mos, P2 = 0.066).
CONCLUSION:
This patient-specific, cell culture-derived, autologous tumor
cell vaccine induced anti-tumor immune
reactivity that was associated with improved survival in patients
with advanced cancer.
PMID:
11915174 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Crit
Rev Oncol Hematol. 2001 Jul-Aug;39(1-2):115-23.
Short-term autologous
tumor cell lines for the active specific immunotherapy of patients
with metastatic melanoma.
Hoag Cancer Center, One Hoag Drive,
Building 41, Newport Beach, CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
We
established short-term cell lines for 108/170 (64%) patients
with metastatic melanoma. Tumor cell numbers were expanded to
10(8), then cells were irradiated, aliquoted, and cryopreserved
for clinical use. Vaccines have been used to treat 69 patients
with clinical follow up for 33 who had measurable metastatic
disease at the time vaccine therapy was initiated (METS), and
33 who had no evidence of disease (NED) at the time of vaccine
therapy following surgical resection of metastases. The protocol
called for a baseline test of delayed tumor hypersensitivity
(DTH), three weekly injections, a repeat of the DTH test, then
monthly injections for an additional 5 months.
Objective
tumor responses were noted in 3/26 (12%) patients who received
a minimum of three vaccinations, one complete, and two partial,
with survivals of 36, 46+, and 78+ months. Only 6/64 (9.4%)
had a positive DTH (>10 mm) at baseline, including three
METS, all of whom progressed within 4 months and died within
a year, and three who are still NED after more than 5 years.
Conversion of DTH from negative to positive was documented in
18/44 (41%) patients who were tested at week 0 and 4.
At
a median follow up of greater than 5 years, the median overall
survival (OS) was 40 months for "NED" with a 5-year
survival rate of 39%, and 8.6 months with a 5-year survival
rate of 10% for "METS" The 18 patients who had conversion
of their DTH had a median event-free survival (EFS) of 15.8
months and 5-year EFS of 32% compared to 4.2 months and 9% for
the 26 non-converters (P=0.012, two-tailed, log-rank test).
Among patients who were NED when treatment started, the 12 patients
whose DTH converted had a median overall survival of 61.4 months
with 5-year survival of 63% compared to 9.7 months and 0% for
the 13 non-converters (P=0.0026). This
treatment approach is feasible, produces minimal toxicity, and
is associated with long-term survival in a significant subset
of patients.
PMID:
11418308 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Patient-specific
vaccines derived from autologous tumor cell lines as active
specific immunotherapy: results of exploratory phase I/II trials
in patients with metastatic melanoma.
Hoag Cancer Center, Newport Beach,
CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
Seventy-four
(74) patients with metastatic melanoma
were treated with patient-specific vaccines derived from autologous
tumor cell lines. Cryopreserved irradiated tumor cells were
injected weekly for 3 weeks, then monthly for 5 months. At a
median follow up >6 years, the median event-free survival
(EFS) was 4.5 months, with 13 patients alive and progression
free 6-12 years later. Median overall survival (OS) was 20.5
months, with 29% 5-year OS. Tumor response rate was 9% among
the 35 patients with evaluable disease who received at least
3 injections. Better survival was observed for patients who
had minimal rather than clinically evident metastatic disease
at the time vaccine therapy was initiated (5-yr OS 47% vs. 13%;
p < 0.0001), received granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating
factor and/or interferon gamma as an adjuvant (5-yr EFS 26%
vs. 0%; p < 0.0001) or received an average of <7 million
cells for each of the first 3 injections, compared to those
who received 7-11.9 million or >12 million cells per injection
(5-yr EFS OS 35% vs. 24%; p = 0.041 and p = 0.034).
There
was a trend toward better EFS for those who had a positive delayed
type hypersensitivity (DTH) reaction to an intradermal injection
of 1 million irradiated tumor cells at baseline, or converted
to positive after 3 injections, compared to those whose DTH
remained negative (5-yr EFS 39% vs. 18%; p = 0.159).
This
treatment approach is feasible, produces minimal toxicity, and
is associated with longterm survival in a significant proportion
of patients.
PMID:
17651037 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Clinical experience
with autologous tumor cell lines for patient-specific vaccine
therapy in metastatic melanoma.
Hoag Cancer Center, Newport Beach,
CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
Because
of their patient specificity and proliferative capacity, tumor
cell lines established from autologous metastatic melanoma tumor
samples may be an excellent immunogen for patient-specific vaccine
therapy. Between October 1990 and July 1996, the Hoag Cancer
Center cell biology laboratory received 136 fresh metastatic
melanoma samples from 122 different patients. Tumor cell lines
were successfully established for 92 of 136 samples (68%), for
87 of 122 patients (71%). Successful cultures were expanded
to 10(8) cells (total culture time about 8 weeks), confirmed
to be sterile, irradiated, and stored frozen in aliquots of
10(7) cells. Vaccines were prepared from 72 lines, and 62 vaccines
were used in 57 different patients. Subcutaneous vaccination
took place on weeks 1, 2 and 3, and then monthly for a total
of 6 months. A delayed tumor hypersensitivity skin test (DTH)
was administered at week zero and week 4. Various adjuvants
were co-administered including BCG, alpha- or gamma-interferon,
and GM-CSF. Patients were monitored for failure-free survival
(FFS) and overall survival (OS) from the date of the first vaccination.
Follow-up data is available for 52 patients, 27 who had no evident
disease (NED) at the time of vaccination and 25 who had metastatic
disease at the time of treatment.
There
were two partial responses which persisted 11.9 and 39.8+ months
among the 25 patients who had detectable metastatic disease
whün treatment was initiated (8%, 1 to 26%, 95%-Ci). Twenty
patients had negative skin tests at week 0 and week 4; six were
positive both times, and 13 converted their DTH from negative
to positive, for a conversion rate of 13 of 33 (39%). Patients
who received interferon-gamma and/or GM-CSF as an adjuvant had
a higher rate of DTH conversion compared to patients who received
other adjuvants (13 of 20 v 2 of 13, P = 0.003). For patients
who were NED, nine of 19 (47%) converted their DTH test compared
to four of 14 (29%) patients with metastatic disease (p = 0.33).
For patients whose DTH converted from negative to positive after
3 weeks of vaccination, median FFS and OS were superior compared
to patients whose DTH remained negative (19.4 v 4.0 months FFS,
p = 0.0052 and 39.6 v 18.3 months OS, p = 0.0602).
The
autologous cell line approach to active specific immunotherapy
is feasible for patients who have resectable
foci of metastatic disease. Administration of such patient-specific
vaccines improves survival for those patients who are
NED at the time of vaccination and convert their DTH skin test,
compared to those whose DTH test remains negative.
PMID:
10850352 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Autologous tumor cell line-derived
vaccine for patient-specific treatment of advanced renal cell
carcinoma.
Hoag
Cancer Center, Newport Beach, CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
AIM:
We previously reported the laboratory methodology for producing
patient-specific irradiated autologous tumor-cell products
derived from short-term cultured tumor cells from resected
renal cell carcinoma, and described preliminary clinical results.
In this study, we report the final clinical results and efforts
to define vaccine potency on the basis of clinical outcome
for these 25 patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Approximately 10(8) cells from successful
short-term cell lines were irradiated, frozen in aliquots
of 10(7) cells, then thawed and administered subcutaneously
(s.c.) once a week for 3 weeks, then once a month for 5 months.
Patients included 19 men and 6 women, who were 43-82 years
of age. Six (6) patients had a large primary lesion, 2 patients
had regionally advanced disease, 3 patients had been rendered
disease-free by surgical resection of distant metastases,
and 14 patients had measurable distant metastatic disease.
RESULTS: The vaccines were well tolerated, and no delayed
autoimmune effects were documented. Delayed-type hypersensitivity
(DTH) tests of irradiated tumor cells were positive in only
1 of 25 patients at week 0, but converted to positive in 6
of 18 patients of DTH-negative patients who were retested
at week 4. Objective response rate in patients who had measurable
metastatic disease was 0 of 14 patients. With a median follow-up
of greater than 7 years from the date of the first DTH test,
median survival is 33.4 months, 5-year survival is 43%, and
10 patients are alive 3-12 years later. The 7 DTH+ patients
survived a median of 2.5 years, and 3 patients are alive after
3, 4, and 7 years. There was no correlation between the number
of irradiated cells or viable irradiated cells injected and
tumor DTH reactivity or survival. CONCLUSION: This approach
is feasible and the therapy is well tolerated, but clinical
benefit was not established in this trial. Any further exploration
of this product should be limited to the adjuvant setting
in a randomized trial.
PMID:
15650449 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Phase I/II trial
of melanoma patient-specific vaccine
of proliferating autologous tumor cells, dendritic cells, and
GM-CSF: planned interim analysis.
Dillman R,
Selvan S,
Schiltz P,
Peterson C,
Allen K,
Depriest C,
McClay E,
Barth N,
Sheehy P,
de Leon C,
Beutel L.
Hoag Cancer Center, Newport Beach, CA 92658, USA. rdillman@hoaghospital.org
AIM: The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility,
safety, and clinical efficacy of patient-specific dendritic
cell vaccines in patients with metastatic melanoma. A planned
interim analysis was conducted on the first 20 patients.
METHODS: Tumor cell lines were established from metastatic
tumor, expanded to 200 million cells, and then incubated with
interferon-gamma for patients who were candidates for therapy.
Cells were irradiated and cryopreserved. Patients underwent
leukapheresis to obtain mononuclear cells that were cultured
in the presence of IL-4 and GM-CSF to produce dendritic cells,
which were incubated with cryopreserved, irradiated tumor cells,
and then stored in aliquots of about 20 million cells for subcutaneous
(s.c.) injections with GM-CSF once a week for 3 weeks, then
once a month for 5 months.
RESULTS: The first 20 eligible patients included 10 men
and 10 women, with a median age of 48 years (range, 16-79 years).
Three (3) patients had brain metastases, and 13 patients had
experienced disease progression after biochemotherapy. At the
time of vaccine treatment, 6 patients had evaluable metastatic
disease, while 14 patients lacked measurable disease. Vaccine
therapy was well tolerated, except for what appeared to be GM-CSF-related
allergic reactions in 2 patients. Delayed-type hypersensitivity
(DTH) tests to irradiated tumor cells were positive in 0 of
20 patients tested at baseline, but converted to positive in
8 patients (40%). At a median follow-up of 13.8 months, there
is a 95% overall survival and a 48% progression-free survival.
Four (4) patients have already survived more than 3.0 years
since starting the vaccine.
CONCLUSION: Based on tolerability, rate of tumor DTH conversion,
and encouraging survival, the trial will
continue accrual to at least 19 patients with measurable
disease and 40 patients who lack measurable disease at the time
of treatment.
PMID:
15650459 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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