The combination of TG4010 with standard chemotherapy in advanced non-small cell lung cancer is feasible and shows encouraging results. A randomized study evaluating the addition of TG4010 to first line chemotherapy in this population is in progress.
The administration of TG4010 was generally well tolerated in patients with metastatic tumors, and transient disease stabilization was observed in several patients, warranting further clinical studies with the product.
Polymorphic epithelial mucin, encoded by the MUC1 gene, is present at the apical surface of glandular epithelial cells. It is over-expressed and aberrantly glycosylated in most breast tumors, resulting in an antigenically distinct molecule and a potential target for immunotherapy. This transmembrane protein, when produced by tumor cells, is often cleaved into the circulation, where it is detectable as a tumor marker (CA 15.3) by various antibodies, allowing for early detection of recurrences and evaluation of treatment efficacy. The objective of the current study was to examine the clinical and environmental safety and immunogenicity of a live recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the human MUC1 and IL2 genes (VV TG5058), referred to here as TG1031. The study was an open-label phase 1 and 2 trial in nine patients with advanced inoperable breast cancer recurrences to the chest wall. The patients were vaccinated intramuscularly with a single dose of TG1031; three patients were treated at each of three progressive dose levels ranging from 5x10(5) to 5x10(7) plaque-forming units. A boost injection at their original dose level was administered in patients responding immunologically, clinically, or both. Vaccination resulted in no significant clinical adverse effects, and there was no environmental contamination by live TG1031. All patients had been vaccinated as children, and patients treated at the highest dose level mounted a significant anti-vaccinia antibody response. None of the nine patients had a significant increase in MUC1-specific antibody titers after one single injection, whereas five patients had a detectable increase in vaccinia virus antibody titers. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells of one patient at the intermediate dose level showed a proliferative response to in vitro culture with vaccinia virus, with a stimulation index of 6. A second patient treated at the intermediate dose level had a stimulation index of 7 to MUC1 peptide and of 14 after a boost injection. This patient had a concomitant decrease in carcinoembryonic antigen serum levels and remained clinically stable for 10 weeks. Evidence of MUC1-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes was detected in two patients. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed an increase in T memory cells (CD45RO) in tumor biopsies after vaccination. The absence of serious adverse events, together with the documentation of immune stimulations in vivo, warrant the further use of TG1031 in immunotherapy trials of breast cancer.
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