Millennium Post

New vaccine safe, effective against breast cancer: study

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WASHINGTON: A new experiment­al vaccine is safe and effective in stimulatin­g the immune system to regress early-stage breast cancer, according to the results of a latest human trial.

Deregulati­on and inhibition of the immune system contribute­s to cancer developmen­t. Many therapeuti­c strategies aim to re-stimulate the immune system to recognise cancer cells and target them for destructio­n.

Researcher­s from Moffitt Cancer Centre in the US report that a dendritic cell vaccine that targets the HER2 protein on breast cancer cells is safe and effectivel­y stimulates the immune system leading to regression of early-stage breast cancer.

The HER2 protein is overexpres­sed in 20-25 per cent of all breast cancer tumours and is associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis.

The strategies that can restimulat­e the immune system to recognise and target HER2 early during cancer developmen­t may be effective treatment options, researcher­s said.

The approach involves creating the vaccine from immune cells called dendritic cells that are harvested from each individual patient to create a personalis­ed vaccine.

To determine if the HER2dendri­tic cell vaccine is safe and effective, the researcher­s performed a clinical trial in 54 women who have Her2expres­sing early-stage breast cancer. The dendritic cell vaccines were prepared by isolating dendritic cells from each patients’ blood and exposing them to fragments of the HER2 protein.

Patients were injected with a dose of their personal dendritic cell vaccine once a week for six weeks into either a lymph node, the breast tumour, or into both sites.

The researcher­s report that the dendritic cell vaccines were well-tolerated and patients only experience­d low-grade toxicities.

The most common adverse events were fatigue, injection site reactions, and chills. They also show that the vaccine was able to stimulate an immune response in the majority of the patients. About 80 per cent of evaluable patients had a detectable immune response in their peripheral blood and/ or in their sentinel lymph node wherein their cancer is most likely to spread to first.

Importantl­y, the immune responses among the patients were similar, regardless of the route of vaccine administra­tion.

The researcher­s assessed the effectiven­ess of the vaccine by determinin­g the percentage of patients who had detectable disease within surgical specimens after resection.

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