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Melanoma Vaccine Strategy Shows Promise in Laboratory Experiments:
Approach Might Benefit a Third of Melanoma Patients
(Philadelphia – March 24, 2006) – A novel approach
to creating a vaccine to treat melanoma has demonstrated promising
effectiveness in a new laboratory study led by researchers at The
Wistar Institute. About a third of melanoma patients might
benefit from such a vaccine. The study appears in the current issue
of Cancer Research.
In the study, the scientists used a small protein called a peptide
found in approximately 70 percent of melanomas, but not in normal
cells, to stimulate immune cells called killer T cells to attack
the melanoma cells. Another type of immune cell called a monocyte
was used to present the peptide, BRAFV600E,
to the killer T cells to trigger their attack on the melanoma cells.
“In our experiments, we saw a strong cancer-killing immune
response when killer T cells are stimulated with this peptide,”
says Dorothee Herlyn, D.V.M.,
senior author on the study and a professor in the Immunology Program
and Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis Program at Wistar. “The
results emphasize the potential of this approach for creating an
effective melanoma vaccine, and we hope to move toward human clinical
trials as soon as possible.”
A substantial proportion of melanoma patients, about 50 percent,
have killer T cells able to recognize the BRAFV600E peptide. Combining
the prevalence of the peptide among melanoma patients – about
70 percent – with the number of patients whose immune cells
are able to respond to the peptide suggests that a vaccine based
on BRAFV600E could treat approximately a third of all melanoma patients.
Herlyn adds that the specificity of the peptide – the fact
that it is found only in melanoma cells, not normal cells –
suggests that the toxicity of any vaccine based on the peptide would
be minimal. Killer T cells sparked into action by the vaccine would
target only the cancer cells, sparing healthy cells entirely.
Looking ahead to possible human clinical trials, another member
of the scientific team, University of Pennsylvania assistant professor
Brian Czerniecki, M.D., Ph.D., is working to prepare yet another
type of immune cell, called a dendritic cell, to present the BRAFV600E
peptide to killer T cells. Dendritic cells have as their primary
job the presentation of foreign materials to the immune system,
and the expectation is that dendritic cells presenting the BRAFV600E
peptide would trigger the killer T cells even more effectively than
the monocyte cells used in the current study. Indeed, such prepared
dendritic cells might serve as the basis for a treatment vaccine
that could be taken into human clinical trials.
Herlyn is senior author on the Cancer Research study.
The lead author is Rajasekharan Somasundaram,
also at Wistar. The additional Wistar coauthors are Rolf
Swoboda, Laura Caputo,
and Laszlo Otvos (now at Temple
University). The remaining coauthors are Barbara Weber, Patricia
Volpe, Patricia van Belle, Susan Hotz, David E. Elder, Lynn Schuchter,
DuPont Guerry, and Brian J. Czerniecki of the University of Pennsylvania,
and Francesco M. Marincola with the National Institutes of Health.
Support for the research was provided by the National Institutes
of Health and the Commonwealth Universal Research Enhancement Program
of the Pennsylvania Department of Health.
The Wistar Institute is an independent nonprofit biomedical research
institution dedicated to discovering the causes and cures for major
diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders,
and infectious diseases, including AIDS and influenza. Founded in
1892 as the first institution of its kind in the nation, The Wistar
Institute today is a National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer
Center focused on basic and translational research. Discoveries
at Wistar have led to the creation of vaccines for such diseases
as rabies, rubella, and rotavirus; significant insights into the
mechanisms of skin, brain, breast, lung, and prostate cancers; and
the development of monoclonal antibodies and other significant research
technologies and tools. News releases from The Wistar Institute
are available to reporters by direct e-mail upon request.
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