Background: DC derived-exosomes are nanomeric vesicles harboring functional MHC/peptide complexes capable of promoting T cell immune responses and tumor rejection. Here we report the feasability and safety of the first Phase I clinical trial using autologous exosomes pulsed with MAGE 3 peptides for the immunization of stage III/IV melanoma patients. Secondary endpoints were the monitoring of T cell responses and the clinical outcome.
Please cite this article as: Mariani P., Piperno-Neumann S., Servois V., Berry M.G., Dorval T., Plancher C., Couturier J., Levy-Gabriel C., Lumbroso-Le Rouic L., Desjardins L., Salmon R.J. Surgical management of liver metastases from uveal melanoma:16 years'experience at the Institut Curie., European Journal of Surgical Oncology (2009Oncology ( ), doi: 10.1016Oncology ( /j.ejso.2009 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
In the MAGE-A3+AS15 arm, clinical activity was higher and the immune response more robust. Therefore, the AS15 immunostimulant was selected for combination with the MAGE-A3 protein in phase III trials.
Vaccination of melanoma patients with tumor-specific antigens recognized by cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) produces significant tumor regressions in a minority of patients. These regressions appear to occur in the absence of massive CTL responses. To detect low-level responses, we resorted to antigenic stimulation of blood lymphocyte cultures in limiting dilution conditions, followed by tetramer analysis, cloning of the tetramer-positive cells, and T-cell receptor (TCR) sequence analysis of the CTL clones that showed strict specificity for the tumor antigen. A monoclonal CTL response against a MAGE-3 antigen was observed in a melanoma patient, who showed partial rejection of a large metastasis after treatment with a vaccine containing only the tumor-specific antigenic peptide. Tetramer analysis after in vitro restimulation indicated that about 1͞40,000 postimmunization CD8 ؉ blood lymphocytes were directed against the antigen. The same TCR was present in all of the positive microcultures. TCR evaluation carried out directly on blood lymphocytes by PCR amplification led to a similar frequency estimate after immunization, whereas the TCR was not found among 2.5 ؋ 10 6 CD8 ؉ lymphocytes collected before immunization. Our results prove unambiguously that vaccines containing only a tumor-specific antigenic peptide can elicit a CTL response. Even though they provide no information about the effector mechanisms responsible for the observed reduction in tumor mass in this patient, they would suggest that low-level CTL responses can initiate tumor rejection.
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