Abstract
The prognosis of patients with advanced biliary tract cancer (BTC) is extremely poor and there are only a few standard treatments. We conducted a phase I trial to investigate the safety, immune response, and antitumor effect of vaccination with four peptides derived from cancer-testis antigens, with a focus on their fluctuations during long-term vaccination until the disease had progressed. Nine patients with advanced BTC who had unresectable tumors and were refractory to standard chemotherapy were enrolled. HLA-A*2402-restricted epitope peptides, lymphocyte antigen 6 complex locus K, TTK protein kinase, insulin-like growth factor-II mRNA-binding protein 3, and DEP domain containing 1 were vaccinated subcutaneously once a week at doses of 0.5, 1, or 2 mg and continued until disease progression. The adverse events were assessed by Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events and the immune response was monitored by an enzyme-linked immunospot assay or by flow cytometry. The clinical effects observed were tumor response, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS). Four-peptide vaccination was well tolerated. No grade 3 or 4 adverse events were observed. Peptide-specific T-cell immune responses were observed in seven of nine patients and clinical responses were observed in six of nine patients. The median PFS and OS were 156 and 380 days. The injection site reaction and CTL induction seemed to be prognostic factors of both PFS and OS. Four-peptide vaccination was well tolerated and seemed to provide some clinical benefit to some patients. These immunologic and clinical responses were maintained over the long term through continuous vaccinations.
Highlights
Biliary tract cancer (BTC) is not a common disease worldwide, but is prevalent in East Asia and Latin America
We selected 4 cancertestis antigens that were overexpressed in nearly 100% of biliary tract cancer (BTC) cancer cells, as revealed by cDNA microarray technology coupled with laser microdissection in a previous study
Previous therapies consisted of operation, gemcitabine, cisplatin, tegafur–gimeracil–oteracil potassium (TS-1), carboplatin, or etoposide (VP-16)
Summary
Biliary tract cancer (BTC) is not a common disease worldwide, but is prevalent in East Asia and Latin America. The occurrence rate is gradually increasing and there is a high mortality rate because most cases of BTC are not diagnosed until advanced and inoperable At this time, very few standard treatments have been established for BTC [1, 2], and development of new treatment modalities is urgently needed. This study was conducted as a phase I study to assess the safety and antigen-specific immune response of a 4-peptide vaccination in patients with advanced BTC. Patients were vaccinated on a continuous basis over the long term until their disease had progressed, a time when we assessed the safety of the vaccination by CTCAE v3.0 as a primary endpoint and the antigen-specific immune response and clinical benefit as secondary endpoints
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