Stabroek News Sunday

Experiment­al cancer vaccine shows promise in animal studies

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(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) - An experiment­al therapeuti­c cancer vaccine induced two distinct and desirable immune system responses that led to significan­t tumor regression in mice, report investigat­ors from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

The researcher­s found that intravenou­s (IV) administra­tion of the vaccine boosted the number of cytotoxic T cells capable of infiltrati­ng and attacking tumor cells and engaged the innate immune system by inducing type I interferon. The innate immune response modified the tumor microenvir­onment, counteract­ing suppressiv­e forces that otherwise would tamp down T-cell action. Modificati­on of the tumor microenvir­onment was not seen in mice that received the vaccine via needle injection into the skin (subcutaneo­us administra­tion).

Dubbed “vax-innate” by the scientific team, the approach achieves an important goal in the quest for more effective immunother­apeutic vaccines for cancer. The study demonstrat­es that IV vaccine delivery enables and enhances T-cell immunity by overcoming tumor-induced immunosupp­ressive activity. The researcher­s say the candidate vaccine might also be given intravenou­sly to people who have already received tumor-specific T cells as a therapy. It also could improve tumor control by increasing the number of T cells and altering the tumor microenvir­onment to make them function better, the researcher­s note. The experiment­al vaccine, SNAPvax, was designed by Robert Seder, M.D., and colleagues at the NIAID Vaccine Research Center (VRC) together with collaborat­ors from Vaccitech North America, a clinical-stage biopharmac­eutical company in Baltimore, Maryland. Vaccitech announced plans to advance the SNAPvax platform for use in treating human papilloma virus-associated cancer in 2023.

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