Background Peptide vaccines offer the opportunity to elicit glioma-specific T cells with tumor killing ability. Using antigens eluted from the surface of glioblastoma samples, we designed a phase I/II study to test safety and immunogenicity of the IMA950 multipeptide vaccine adjuvanted with poly-ICLC (polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid stabilized with polylysine and carboxymethylcellulose) in human leukocyte antigen A2+ glioma patients. Methods Adult patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma (n = 16) and grade III astrocytoma (n = 3) were treated with radiochemotherapy followed by IMA950/poly-ICLC vaccination. The first 6 patients received IMA950 (9 major histocompatibility complex [MHC] class I and 2 MHC class II peptides) intradermally and poly-ICLC intramuscularly (i.m.). After protocol amendment, IMA950 and poly-ICLC were mixed and injected subcutaneously (n = 7) or i.m. (n = 6). Primary endpoints were safety and immunogenicity. Secondary endpoints were overall survival, progression-free survival at 6 and 9 months, and vaccine-specific peripheral cluster of differentiation (CD)4 and CD8 T-cell responses. Results The IMA950/poly-ICLC vaccine was safe and well tolerated. Four patients presented cerebral edema with rapid recovery. For the first 6 patients, vaccine-induced CD8 T-cell responses were restricted to a single peptide and CD4 responses were absent. After optimization of vaccine formulation, we observed multipeptide CD8 and sustained T helper 1 CD4 T-cell responses. For the entire cohort, CD8 T-cell responses to a single or multiple peptides were observed in 63.2% and 36.8% of patients, respectively. Median overall survival was 19 months for glioblastoma patients. Conclusion We provide, in a clinical trial, using cell surface-presented antigens, insights into optimization of vaccines generating effector T cells for glioma patients. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01920191.
Glioma represents a serious health burden in terms of morbidity and mortality. The prognostic significance of the lymphoid and myeloid infiltrates in glioma is not clearly determined. Moreover, the characterization of different leukocyte subsets in the tumor microenvironment relies mainly on immunohistochemistry observations, and data about their association with prognosis are contradictory. Here, we performed acomprehensive study of both the tumor-infiltrating and circulating immune compartments of patients with high-grade glioma. Nineteen tumor biopsies and 30 PBMC samples were analyzed by RNA sequencing. Validation was performed on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) RNA sequencing data from glioma and on additional 39 tumor biopsies analyzed by flow cytometry. We identified prognostic tumor and peripheral immune signatures, which associate increased inflammation, immune infiltration and activation with shorter overall survival in high-grade glioma patients. Importantly, we confirmed our observations by flow cytometry analysis and validated the tumor-signature using the TCGA dataset. In addition, both tumor genotype and grade associated with the degree of glioma immune infiltration. Unlike in the majority of cancers, lymphocyte infiltration at the tumor site is anegative prognostic factor in glioma, suggesting the ambivalent pro-tumorigenic role of immune responses in glioma.
We present the results of a double-blind trial of naftidrofuryl (Praxilene) in the treatment of intermittent claudication. One hundred and twenty-eight patients were subjected to a standard walking test 3 and 6 months after treatment. There was no significant objective improvement attributable to the drug. Although both groups significantly increased their walking time to the onset of pain, those patients over 60 years old taking naftidrofuryl showed a significant improvement over their pretreatment walking times to onset of pain, whereas their controls did not.
We have reviewed the results of aorto-iliac reconstruction in 173 patients. We found that the presence of distal disease resulted in significantly worse results, when assessed by the patients' ability to walk and by postoperative pressure index changes, than if the run-off were clear. The importance of subsequent or simultaneous distal reconstruction in these cases is discussed. Patients having rest pain were older, had a worse runoff and had a higher incidence of associated disorders than patients having intermittent claudication alone.
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