Preliminary studies with a variety of cell-based vaccines suggest target accessibility (potential immunogenicity) to immune-directed approaches in a variety of solid tumors. However, four primary factors limit the generation of effective immune-mediated anticancer activity in therapeutic applications: 1) identifying and/or targeting cancer-associated immunogen(s) (target) in an individual patient; 2) insufficient or inhibited level of antigen-presenting cell (dendritic cell, macrophage) priming and/or presentation; 3) suboptimal T cell activation (potency) and proliferation; and 4) cancer-induced inhibition of the anticancer immune response in both afferent and efferent limbs…
Tag: <span>anticancer immune response</span>
We have designed a novel autologous vaccine by combining two vaccine strategies that have each been previously tested in separate non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) clinical trials: 1) a GM-CSF gene transduced tumor cell vaccine; and 2) a TGFβ2 antisense gene transduced cell vaccine. Each has demonstrated similar beneficial effects without any evidence of significant toxicity in advanced cancer patients…