The Commercial Appeal

Cancer vaccines tailored to patient

3 with melanoma are treated

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One day, cancer-treatment regimens might include vaccines specially tailored to each patient. In a small preliminar­y study published Thursday in Science, researcher­s report successful use of these vaccines in three patients.

To help the melanoma patients fight off their cancers, the researcher­s sequenced the genomes of their tumors. They used this genetic informatio­n to figure out what peptides (chains of amino acids) known as neoantigen­s would show up on the surface of the tumor.

“You can think of a neoantigen as a flag on each cancer cell,” said first author Beatriz Carreno, an associate professor at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “Each patient’s melanoma can have hundreds of different flags.”

The immune system is supposed to react violently to these peptides and attack the cells they come from. But to help boost this natural immune response, the researcher­s selected seven of the tumorspeci­fic peptides for each patient and built vaccines designed to “remind” the immune system to attack them. They went after the “flags” that are most likely to elicit the most effective immune responses.

The results are promising. For each patient, the immune system recognized three of the seven neoantigen­s contained in the vaccines. As a result, patients who received the vaccines produced more cancer-fighting T cells and produced more different kinds of T cells. This is a big deal, the researcher­s say; it means that cancer patients have a potentiall­y rich pool of tumor-specific immune cells that stay dormant — unless they’re activated by a vaccine.

“Our team is very encouraged by the quality of the immune response directed against the melanoma neoantigen­s in all three patients,” said Gerald Linette, a study coauthor and an oncologist at Washington University.

The stage III patients weren’t asked to rely solely on these vaccines. They’d already received traditiona­l treatment. But a threedose, 18-week course of personaliz­ed vaccines gave all three patients a T cell boost without any negative side effects. In theory, the same kinds of vaccines could be made to suit any patient — with any kind of cancer — and help boost the effect of whatever treatment chosen.

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