Personalized
vaccines hold cancer at bay in two early trials
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[July 06, 2017] By
Ben Hirschler
LONDON (Reuters) -A novel class of
personalized cancer vaccines, tailored to the tumors of individual
patients, kept disease in check in two early-stage clinical trials,
pointing to a new way to help the immune system fight back.
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Although so-called immunotherapy drugs from the likes of Merck and
Co, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Roche are starting to revolutionize
cancer care, they still only work for a limited number of patients.
By adding a personalized cancer vaccine, scientists believe it
should be possible to improve substantially the effectiveness of
such immune-boosting medicines.
Twelve skin cancer patients, out of a total of 19 across both the
trials, avoided relapses for two years after receiving different
vaccines developed by German and U.S. teams, researchers reported in
the journal Nature on Wednesday.
The small Phase I trials now need to be followed by larger studies,
but the impressive early results suggest the new shots work far
better than first-generation cancer vaccines that typically targeted
a single cancer characteristic.
The new treatments contain between 10 and 20 different mutated
proteins, or "neoantigens," that are specific to an individual's
tumor. These proteins are not found on healthy cells and they look
foreign to the immune system, prompting specialist T-cells to step
up their attack on cancer cells.
One vaccine was developed at the U.S.-based Dana-Farber Institute
and Broad Institute and the other by privately owned German biotech
firm BioNTech, which uses so-called messenger RNA to carry the code
for making its therapeutic proteins.
Roche, the world's largest cancer drugmaker, is already betting on
BioNTech's technology after signing a $310 million deal last
September allowing it to test the German vaccine with its
immunotherapy drug Tecentriq.
BioNTech's co-founder and CEO Ugur Sahin told Reuters that
combination trials using Roche's drug were due to start later this
year against a number of different cancers.
Rival biotech firm Neon Therapeutics, which was formed to exploit
the U.S. research, initiated tests of its personalized neoantigen
vaccine in combination with Bristol-Myer's Opdivo drug last year.
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EXPENSIVE TREATMENT
New drugs like Opdivo and Tecentriq that enlist the body's immune
system are improving the odds of survival, but their typical price
tag of more than $150,000 a year is controversial and adding a
personalized vaccine will jack costs up further.
Sahin acknowledged such vaccines would be expensive at first but
said costs could be brought down by economies of scale and
automation.
"In the mid to long term the cost will fall dramatically . . . it is
an individual treatment but it is a universal process," he said. "We
are at a very early stage at the moment but in the long-run this
approach could change everything."
Cornelius Melief of Leiden University Medical Center, who was not
involved in either study, said the research confirmed the potential
of neoantigen vaccines.
"Controlled, randomized Phase II clinical trials with more
participants are now needed to establish the efficacy of these
vaccines in patients with any type of cancer that has enough
mutations to provide sufficient neoantigen targets for this type of
approach," he said.
SOURCE: http://go.nature.com/2tpVIq6 and http://go.nature.com/2uKX3XW
Nature, online July 5, 2017.
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