Effective Clinical Responses in Metastatic Melanoma Patients after Vaccination with Primary Myeloid Dendritic Cells

PMID: 26712687
Journal: Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (volume: 22, issue: 9, Clin. Cancer Res. 2016 05;22(9):2155-66)
Published: 2015-12-28

Authors:
Schreibelt G, Bol KF, Westdorp H, Wimmers F, Aarntzen EH, Duiveman-de Boer T, van de Rakt MW, Scharenborg NM, de Boer AJ, Pots JM, Olde Nordkamp MA, van Oorschot TG, Tel J, Winkels G, Petry K, Blokx WA, van Rossum MM, Welzen ME, Mus RD, Croockewit SA, Koornstra RH, Jacobs JF, Kelderman S, Blank CU, Gerritsen WR, Punt CJ, Figdor CG, de Vries IJ

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Thus far, dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy of cancer was primarily based on in vitro-generated monocyte-derived DCs, which require extensive in vitro manipulation. Here, we report on a clinical study exploiting primary CD1c(+) myeloid DCs, naturally circulating in the blood.

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Fourteen stage IV melanoma patients, without previous systemic treatment for metastatic disease, received autologous CD1c(+) myeloid DCs, activated by only brief (16 hours) ex vivo culture and loaded with tumor-associated antigens of tyrosinase and gp100.

RESULTS: Our results show that therapeutic vaccination against melanoma with small amounts (3-10 × 10(6)) of myeloid DCs is feasible and without substantial toxicity. Four of 14 patients showed long-term progression-free survival (12-35 months), which directly correlated with the development of multifunctional CD8(+) T-cell responses in three of these patients. In particular, high CD107a expression, indicative for cytolytic activity, and IFNγ as well as TNFα and CCL4 production was observed. Apparently, these T-cell responses are essential to induce tumor regression and promote long-term survival by stalling tumor growth.

CONCLUSIONS: We show that vaccination of metastatic melanoma patients with primary myeloid DCs is feasible and safe and results in induction of effective antitumor immune responses that coincide with improved progression-free survival. Clin Cancer Res; 22(9); 2155-66. ©2015 AACR.