We conducted a phase 1 study of 9 pediatric patients with recurrent brain tumors using monocyte-derived dendritic cells pulsed with tumor RNA to produce antitumor vaccine (DCRNA) preparations. The objectives of this study included (1) establishing safety and feasibility and (2) measuring changes in general, antigen-specific, and tumor-specific immune responses after DCRNA. Dendritic cells were derived from freshly isolated monocytes after 7 days of culture with IL-4 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, pulsed with autologous tumor RNA, and then cryopreserved. Patients received at least 3 vaccines, each consisting of an intravenous and an intradermal administration at biweekly intervals. The study showed that this method for producing and administering DCRNA from a single leukapheresis product was both feasible and safe in this pediatric brain tumor population. Immune function at the time of enrollment into the study was impaired in all patients tested. While humoral responses to recall antigens (diphtheria and tetanus) were intact in all patients, cellular responses to mitogen and recall antigens were below normal. Following DCRNA vaccine, 2 of 7 patients showed stable clinical disease and 1 of 7 showed a partial response. Two of 7 patients who were tested showed a tumor-specific immune response to DCRNA. This study showed that DCRNA vaccines are both safe and feasible in children with tumors of the central nervous system with a single leukapheresis.
Despite numerous studies of AYA cancer survivors, very few studies have examined the psychosocial and psychological impacts of cancer when onset occurs during adolescence and young adulthood. Almost no studies have examined the impacts on their parent caregivers. The findings of this study support the need for early identification of psychological distress, appropriate developmental perspectives to understand AYA distress, and the need for family-based psychological assessment and interventions.
We have investigated the significance of telomerase activity (TA) and telomere length (TL) in multiple myeloma (MM). The analyses were undertaken on CD138 ؉ MM cells isolated from the marrow of 183 patients either at diagnosis or in relapse. There was heterogeneity in telomerase expression; 36% of the patients had TA levels comparable to those detected in normal plasma cells, and 13% of patients had levels 1-to 4-fold greater than in a neuroblastoma cell line control. The TL of MM cells was significantly shorter than that of the patients' own leukocytes; in 25% of patients, the TL measured less than 4.0 kbp. Analysis of TL distribution indicated selective TA-mediated stabilization of shorter telomeres when mean TL fell below 5.5 kbp. Unusually long (10.8-15.0 kbp) telomeres were observed in 7 patients, and low TA was observed in 5 of 7 patients, suggesting the operation of a TA-independent pathway of telomere stabilization. A strong negative correlation existed between TA and TL or platelet count. TL negatively correlated with age and with interleukin-6 (IL-6) and 2-microglobulin levels. Various cytogenetic abnormalities, including those associated with poor prognosis, strongly correlated with TA and, to a lesser extent, with short TL. High TA and short TL defined a subgroup of patients with poor prognosis. At 1 year the survival rate in patients with TA levels lower than 25% of neuroblastoma control and TL greater than 5.5 kbp was 82%, whereas in patients with higher TA and shorter TL the survival rate was 63% (P ؍ .004). The 2-year survival rate for patients with TA levels lower than 25% was 81%, and it was 52% in those with higher TA levels (P < .0001). (Blood. 2003;101:4982-4989)
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