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1.
Hilko Ardon Stefaan W. Van Gool Tina Verschuere Wim Maes Steffen Fieuws Raf Sciot Guido Wilms Philippe Demaerel Jan Goffin Frank Van Calenbergh Johan Menten Paul Clement Maria Debiec-Rychter Steven De Vleeschouwer 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2012,61(11):2033-2044
Purpose
Dendritic cell (DC)-based tumor vaccination has rendered promising results in relapsed high-grade glioma patients. In the HGG-2006 trial (EudraCT 2006-002881-20), feasibility, toxicity, and clinical efficacy of the full integration of DC-based tumor vaccination into standard postoperative radiochemotherapy are studied in 77 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma.Patients and methods
Autologous DC are generated after leukapheresis, which is performed before the start of radiochemotherapy. Four weekly induction vaccines are administered after the 6-week course of concomitant radiochemotherapy. During maintenance chemotherapy, 4 boost vaccines are given. Feasibility and progression-free survival (PFS) at 6?months (6mo-PFS) are the primary end points. Overall survival (OS) and immune profiling, rather than monitoring, as assessed in patients’ blood samples, are the secondary end points. Analysis has been done on intent-to-treat basis.Results
The treatment was feasible without major toxicity. The 6mo-PFS was 70.1?% from inclusion. Median OS was 18.3?months. Outcome improved significantly with lower EORTC RPA classification. Median OS was 39.7, 18.3, and 10.7?months for RPA classes III, IV, and V, respectively. Patients with a methylated MGMT promoter had significantly better PFS (p?=?0.0027) and OS (p?=?0.0082) as compared to patients with an unmethylated status. Exploratory “immunological profiles” were built to compare to clinical outcome, but no statistical significant evidence was found for these profiles to predict clinical outcome.Conclusion
Full integration of autologous DC-based tumor vaccination into standard postoperative radiochemotherapy for newly diagnosed glioblastoma seems safe and possibly beneficial. These results were used to power the currently running phase IIb randomized clinical trial. 相似文献2.
Nicholaou T Chen W Davis ID Jackson HM Dimopoulos N Barrow C Browning J Macgregor D Williams D Hopkins W Maraskovsky E Venhaus R Pan L Hoffman EW Old LJ Cebon J 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2011,60(11):1625-1637
Background
NY-ESO-1 protein formulated in ISCOMATRIX? results in CD4+, CD8+ T cell and antibody-mediated immunity. We evaluated persistence of immunity, relapse-free survival and tumour antigen expression upon relapse in patients vaccinated in an earlier trial.Methods
Immunity was measured in 28 patients with resected NY-ESO-1-expressing tumours (melanoma 25, breast 3) 252?C1,155?days (median?=?681) after vaccination. In the earlier vaccination, trial patients received NY-ESO-1 with ISCOMATRIX? adjuvant at three protein doses 10???g, 30???g or 100???g (n?=?14); 100???g NY-ESO-1 protein (n?=?8) or placebo (n?=?6), together with 1???g of intradermal (ID) NY-ESO-1 protein twice for DTH skin testing. Immune responses assessed in the current study included antibody titres, circulating NY-ESO-1-specific T cells and DTH reactivity 2?days after DTH skin testing with NY-ESO-1 protein (1???g) or peptides (10???g). Relapse-free survival was determined for 42 melanoma patients. On relapse NY-ESO-1 and HLA, class I was assessed by immunohistochemistry in 17.Results
Persisting anti-NY-ESO-1 immunity was detected in 10/14 recipients who had previously received vaccine with ISCOMATRIX? adjuvant. In contrast, immunity only persisted in 3/14 who received 100???g un-adjuvanted NY-ESO-1 protein (3/8) or 2???g DTH protein (0/6) P?=?0.02. Hence, persisting NY-ESO-1 immunity was associated with prior adjuvant. Tumour NY-ESO-1 or HLA class I was downregulated in participants who relapsed suggesting immunoediting had occurred.Conclusion
Immunoediting suggests that a signal of anti-tumour activity was observed in high-risk resected melanoma patients vaccinated with NY-ESO-1/ISCOMATRIX?. This was associated with measurable persisting immunity in the majority of vaccinated subjects tested. A prospective randomised trial has been undertaken to confirm these results. 相似文献3.
Background
Somatostatin (SST) via five Gi coupled receptors namely SSTR1-5 is known to inhibit cell proliferation by cytostatic and cytotoxic mechanisms. Heterodimerization plays a crucial role in modulating the signal transduction pathways of SSTR subtypes. In the present study, we investigated human SSTR2/SSTR3 heterodimerization, internalization, MAPK signaling, cell proliferation and apoptosis in HEK-293 cells in response to SST and specific agonists for SSTR2 and SSTR3.Results
Although in basal conditions, SSTR2 and SSTR3 colocalize at the plasma membrane and exhibit heterodimerization, the cell surface distribution of both receptors decreased upon agonist activation and was accompanied by a parallel increase in intracellular colocalization. Receptors activation by SST and specific agonists significantly decreased cAMP levels in cotransfected cells in comparison to control. Agonist-mediated modulation of pERK1/2 was time and concentration-dependent, and pronounced in serum-deprived conditions. pERK1/2 was inhibited in response to SST; conversely receptor-specific agonist treatment caused inhibition at lower concentration and activation at higher concentration. Strikingly, ERK1/2 phosphorylation was sustained upon prolonged treatment with SST but not with receptor-specific agonists. On the other hand, SST and receptor-specific agonists modulated p38 phosphorylation time-dependently. The receptor activation in cotransfected cells exhibits Gi-dependent inhibition of cell proliferation attributed to increased PARP-1 expression and TUNEL staining, whereas induction of p21 and p27Kip1 suggests a cytostatic effect.Conclusion
Our study provides new insights in SSTR2/SSTR3 mediated signaling which might help in better understanding of the molecular interactions involving SSTRs in tumor biology. 相似文献4.
Steven De Vleeschouwer Hilko Ardon Frank Van Calenbergh Raf Sciot Guido Wilms Johannes van Loon Jan Goffin Stefaan Van Gool 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2012,61(11):2105-2112
Purpose
Adult patients with relapsed high-grade glioma are a very heterogenous group with, however, an invariably dismal prognosis. We stratified patients with relapsed high-grade glioma treated with re-operation and postoperative dendritic cell (DC) vaccination according to a simple recursive partitioning analysis (RPA) model to predict outcome.Patients and methods
Based on age, pathology, Karnofsky performance score, and mental status, 117 adult patients with relapsed malignant glioma, undergoing re-operation, and postoperative adjuvant dendritic cell (DC) vaccination were stratified into 4 classes. Kaplan–Meier survival estimates were generated for each class of this HGG-IMMUNO RPA model. Extent of resection was documented but not included in the prognostic model.Results
Kaplan–Meier overall survival estimates revealed significant (p?<?0.0001) differences among the 4 HGG-IMMUNO RPA classes. Long-term survivors, surviving more than 24?months after the re-operation and vaccination, are seen in 54.5, 26.7, 11.5, and 0?% for the classes I, II, III, and IV respectively.Conclusion
This HGG-IMMUNO RPA classification is able to predict overall survival in a large group of adult patients with a relapsed malignant glioma, treated with re-operation and postoperative adjuvant DC vaccination in the HGG-IMMUNO-2003 cohort comparison trial. The model appears useful for prognostic patient counseling for patients participating in DC vaccination trials. A substantial number of long-term survivors after relapse are seen in class I to III, but not in class IV patients. 相似文献5.
Chu CS Boyer J Schullery DS Gimotty PA Gamerman V Bender J Levine BL Coukos G Rubin SC Morgan MA Vonderheide RH June CH 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2012,61(5):629-641
Purpose
In spite of increased rates of complete response to initial chemotherapy, most patients with advanced ovarian cancer relapse and succumb to progressive disease. Immunotherapy may have potential for consolidation therapy.Experimental design
This randomized open-label phase I/II trial evaluated responses of patients with advanced ovarian cancer in remission for vaccination with monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DC) loaded with Her2/neu, hTERT, and PADRE peptides, with or without low-dose intravenous cyclophosphamide. All patients also received pneumococcal vaccine and were randomized to cyclophosphamide 2?days prior to first vaccination. Blood samples were analyzed by ELISPOT and flow cytometry.Results
Of 11 patients, 2 recurred during vaccination. Nine received all 4 doses: 3 patients recurred at 6, 17, and 26?months, respectively, and 6 have no evidence of disease at 36?months. No grade 3/4 vaccine-related toxicities were noted. The 3-year overall survival was 90%. Patients receiving cyclophosphamide showed a non-significant improvement in survival over controls. Patients receiving cyclophosphamide had a transient reduction in neutrophils, but no change in total lymphocytes or regulatory T cells. Modest T-cell responses to Her2/neu and hTERT were seen post-vaccine by IFN-γ ELISPOT. Patients demonstrated below normal responses to the diphtheria conjugate protein CRM197, a component of the pneumococcal vaccine.Conclusions
In this setting, peptide-loaded DC vaccination elicits modest immune responses, but survival is promising. Pneumococcal vaccination revealed substantial immune suppression, even in patients in remission. Rational design of consolidative strategies for ovarian cancer will need to overcome tolerance and immunosuppression. 相似文献6.
Arlind Batalli Pranvera Ibrahimi Ibadete Bytyçi Artan Ahmeti Edmond Haliti Shpend Elezi Michael Y. Henein Gani Bajraktari 《Cardiovascular ultrasound》2017,15(1):12
Background
Quality of life is as important as survival in heart failure (HF) patients. Controversies exist with regards to echocardiographic determinants of exercise capacity in HF, particularly in patients with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The aim of this study was to prospectively examine echocardiographic parameters that correlate and predict functional exercise capacity assessed by 6 min walk test (6-MWT) in patients with HFpEF.Methods
In 111 HF patients (mean age 63?±?10 years, 47% female), an echo-Doppler study and a 6-MWT were performed in the same day. Patients were divided into two groups based on the 6-MWT distance (Group I: ≤ 300 m and Group II: >300 m).Results
Group I were older (p?=?0.008), had higher prevalence of diabetes (p?=?0.027), higher baseline heart rate (p?=?0.004), larger left atrium - LA (p?=?0.001), longer LV filling time - FT (p?=?0.019), shorter isovolumic relaxation time (p?=?0.037), shorter pulmonary artery acceleration time - PA acceleration time (p?=?0.006), lower left atrial lateral wall myocardial velocity (a’) (p?=?0.018) and lower septal systolic myocardial velocity (s’) (p?=?0.023), compared with Group II.Patients with HF and reduced EF (HFrEF) had lower hemoglobin (p?=?0.007), higher baseline heart rate (p?=?0.005), higher NT-ProBNP (p?=?0.001), larger LA (p?=?0.004), lower septal s’, e’, a’ waves, and septal mitral annular plane systolic excursion (MAPSE), shorter PA acceleration time (p?<?0.001 for all), lower lateral MAPSE, higher E/A & E/e’, and shorter LVFT (p?=?0.001 for all), lower lateral e’ (p?=?0.009), s’ (p?=?0.006), right ventricular e’ and LA emptying fraction (p?=?0.012 for both), compared with HFpEF patients.In multivariate analysis, only LA diameter [2.676 (1.242–5.766), p?=?0.012], and diabetes [0.274 (0.084–0.898), p?=?0.033] independently predicted poor 6-MWT performance in the group as a whole. In HFrEF, age [1.073 (1.012–1.137), p?=?0.018] and LA diameter [3.685 (1.348–10.071), p?=?0.011], but in HFpEF, lateral s’ [0.295 (0.099–0.882), p?=?0.029], and hemoglobin level [0.497 (0.248–0.998), p?=?0.049] independently predicted poor 6-MWT performance.Conclusions
In HF patients determinants of exercise capacity differ according to severity of overall LV systolic function, with left atrial enlargement in HFrEF and longitudinal systolic shortening in HFpEF as the the main determinants.7.
M. Remmelink K. D. Sjauw Z. Y. Yong J. D. E. Haeck M. M. Vis K. T. Koch J. G. P. Tijssen R. J. de Winter J. P. S. Henriques J. J. Piek J. Baan Jr. 《Netherlands heart journal》2013,21(5):238-244
Background
Coronary microvascular resistance is increased after primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), which may be related in part to changed left ventricular (LV) dynamics. Therefore we studied the coronary microcirculation in relation to systolic and diastolic LV function after STEMI.Methods
The study cohort consisted of 12 consecutive patients, all treated with primary PCI for a first anterior wall STEMI. At 4 months, we assessed pressure-volume loops. Subsequently, we measured intracoronary pressure and flow velocity and calculated coronary microvascular resistance. Infarct size and LV mass were assessed using magnetic resonance imaging.Results
Patients with an impaired systolic LV function due to a larger myocardial infarction showed a higher baseline average peak flow velocity (APV) than the other patients (26?±?7 versus 17?±?5 cm/s, p?=?0.003, respectively), and showed an impaired variable microvascular resistance index (2.1?±?1.0 versus 4.1?±?1.3 mmHg?cm?1?s?1, p?=?0.003, respectively). Impaired diastolic relaxation time was inversely correlated with hyperaemic APV (r?=??0.56, p?=?0.003) and positively correlated with hyperaemic microvascular resistance (r?=?0.48, p?=?0.01). LV dilatation was associated with a reduced variable microvascular resistance index (r?=?0.78, p?=?0.006).Conclusion
A larger anterior myocardial infarction results in impaired LV performance associated with reduced coronary microvascular resistance variability, in particular due to higher coronary blood flow at baseline in these compromised left ventricles. 相似文献8.
Florent Malard Myriam Labopin Christina Cho Didier Blaise Esperanza B. Papadopoulos Jakob Passweg Richard O’Reilly Edouard Forcade Molly Maloy Liisa Volin Hugo Castro-Malaspina Yosr Hicheri Ann A. Jakubowski Corentin Orvain Sergio Giralt Mohamad Mohty Arnon Nagler Miguel-Angel Perales 《Journal of hematology & oncology》2018,11(1):127
Background
Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is one of the leading causes of non-relapse mortality and morbidity after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HCT).Methods
We evaluated the outcomes of two well-established strategies used for GVHD prevention: in vivo T cell depletion using antithymocyte globulin (ATG) and ex vivo T cell depletion using a CD34-selected (CD34+) graft. A total of 525 adult patients (363 ATG, 162 CD34+) with intermediate or high-risk cytogenetics acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in first complete remission (CR1) were included. Patients underwent myeloablative allo-HCT using matched related or unrelated donors.Results
Two-year overall survival estimate was 69.9% (95% CI, 58.5–69.4) in the ATG group and 67.6% (95% CI, 60.3–74.9) in the CD34+ group (p?=?0.31). The cumulative incidence of grade II–IV acute GVHD and chronic GVHD was higher in the ATG cohort [HR 2.0 (95% CI 1.1–3.7), p?=?0.02; HR 15.1 (95% CI 5.3–42.2), p?<?0.0001]. Parameters associated with a lower GVHD-free relapse-free survival (GRFS) were ATG [HR 1.6 (95% CI 1.1–2.2), p?=?0.006], adverse cytogenetic [HR 1.7 (95% CI 1.3–2.2), p?=?0.0004], and the use of an unrelated donor [HR 1.4 (95% CI 1.0–1.9), p?=?0.02]. There were no statistical differences between ATG and CD34+ in terms of relapse [HR 1.52 (95% CI 0.96–2.42), p?=?0.07], non-relapse mortality [HR 0.96 (95% CI 0.54–1.74), p?=?0.90], overall survival [HR 1.43 (95% CI 0.97–2.11), p?=?0.07], and leukemia-free survival [HR 1.25 (95% CI 0.88–1.78), p?=?0.21]. Significantly, more deaths related to infection occurred in the CD34+ group (16/52 vs. 19/112, p?=?0.04).Conclusions
These data suggest that both ex vivo CD34-selected and in vivo ATG T cell depletion are associated with a rather high OS and should be compared in a prospective randomized trial.9.
Background
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) has been recently accepted as an effective alternative in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer. However, little is known about the effects of NACT on the immunological microenvironment in cervical cancers. In this study, we analyzed the alterations of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) before and after NACT and analyzed their prognostic significance in advanced cervical cancer patients treated with platinum-based NACT.Methods
We recruited 137 patients with stage Ib2 and IIa2 cervical cancer retrospectively. Pretreatment biopsy and surgical specimens after NACT were immunostained with CD8 and Foxp3. The densities of intratumoral and peritumoral immunopositive TILs were analyzed separately.Results
Foxp3+ T cells density significantly decreased in both intratumoral (median 28.49 vs. 19.97; Z?=???8.635, p?<?0.001) and peritumoral (median 113.53 vs. 82.48; Z?=???3.741, p?<?0.001) areas after NACT, whereas CD8+ T cell counts remained stable in both intratumoral (median 121.32 vs. 109.59; Z?=???0.817,p?=?0.414) and peritumoral (median 402.56 vs. 390.84; Z?=???1.138,p?=?0.255) areas. Patients with pathological complete response (pCR) had significantly lower number of Foxp3+ T cell density after NACT than non-pCR cases in both intratumoral (median16.12 vs. 22.00; Z?=???2.009, p?=?0.045) and peritumoral areas(median 63.31 vs. 98.48; Z?=???2.469, p?=?0.014). Multivariate analyses demonstrated that high ratio of intratumoral CD8/peritumoral Foxp3 in residual tumors was independent prognostic factor for both progression-free survival (HR?=?0.297; 95% CI, 0.109–0.810, p?=?0.018) and overall survival (HR?=?0.078; 95% CI, 0.010–0.598, p?=?0.014).Conclusions
NACT in cervical cancers can induce anti-cancer immunity by altering TILs subsets. An elevated intratumoral CD8/peritumoral Foxp3 ratio after NACT may confer a favorable clinical outcome.10.
11.
M. Voskuil W. L. Verloop P. J. Blankestijn P. Agostoni P. R. Stella P. A. Doevendans 《Netherlands heart journal》2011,19(7-8):319-323
Background
In a subpopulation of patients with essential hypertension, therapeutic targets are not met, despite the use of multiple types of medication. In this paper we describe our first experience with a novel percutaneous treatment modality using renal artery radiofrequency (RF) ablation.Methods
Patients who were resistant to at least three types of antihypertensive medical therapy (office systolic blood pressure?≥?160 mmHg; n?=?9) or who did not tolerate medication (n?=?2) were selected. Between July and November 2010, a total of 11 patients received percutaneous RF treatment. Patients were followed up for 1 month after treatment. Urine and blood samples were taken to evaluate the effects on renal function and neurohumeral factors.Results
No periprocedural complications or adverse events during follow-up were noted. A reduction of mean office blood pressure was seen from 203/109?±?32/19 mmHg at baseline to 178/97?±?28/21 mmHg at 1 month follow-up (mean difference 25?±?12 mmHg, p?<?0.01). Also, we noted a significant decrease in aldosterone level (391?±?210 pmol/L versus 250?±?142 pmol/L; p?=?0.03), while there was no decrease in plasma renin activity (190?±?134 fmol/L/s versus 195?±?163 fmol/L/s; p?=?0.43). No change in renal function was noted.Conclusion
Catheter-based renal denervation seems an attractive novel minimally invasive treatment option in patients with resistant hypertension, with a low risk of serious adverse events. 相似文献12.
Ester Simeone Giusy Gentilcore Diana Giannarelli Antonio M. Grimaldi Corrado Caracò Marcello Curvietto Assunta Esposito Miriam Paone Marco Palla Ernesta Cavalcanti Fabio Sandomenico Antonella Petrillo Gerardo Botti Franco Fulciniti Giuseppe Palmieri Paola Queirolo Paolo Marchetti Virginia Ferraresi Gaetana Rinaldi Maria Pia Pistillo Gennaro Ciliberto Nicola Mozzillo Paolo A. Ascierto 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2014,63(7):675-683
Background
Ipilimumab can induce durable disease control and long-term survival in patients with metastatic melanoma. Identification of a biomarker that correlates with clinical benefit and potentially provides an early marker of response is an active area of research.Patients and methods
Ipilimumab was available upon physician request for patients aged ≥16 years with stage III (unresectable) or IV cutaneous, ocular or mucosal melanoma, who had failed or did not tolerate previous treatments and had no other therapeutic option available. Patients received ipilimumab 3 mg/kg every 3 weeks for four doses. Tumour assessments were conducted at baseline, Week 12 and Week 24 using immune-related response criteria. Patients were monitored continuously for adverse events (AEs), including immune-related AEs. Candidate immunological markers were evaluated in peripheral blood and sera samples collected at baseline and Weeks 4, 7, 10 and 12.Results
Among 95 patients treated with ipilimumab 3 mg/kg, the immune-related disease control rate at Week 24 was 38 %. With a median follow-up of 24 months, median overall survival was 9.6 months. Both disease control and survival were significantly associated with decreasing levels of lactate dehydrogenase, C-reactive protein and FoxP3/regulatory T cells, and increasing absolute lymphocyte count, between baseline and the end of dosing (Week 12).Conclusion
Ipilimumab is a feasible treatment option for heavily pretreated patients with metastatic melanoma. Changes in some immunological markers between baseline and the fourth ipilimumab infusion appear to be associated with disease control and survival, but verification in prospective clinical trials is required. 相似文献13.
Yuan J Ginsberg B Page D Li Y Rasalan T Gallardo HF Xu Y Adams S Bhardwaj N Busam K Old LJ Allison JP Jungbluth A Wolchok JD 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2011,60(8):1137-1146
Background
Anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) antibodies, such as ipilimumab, have generated measurable immune responses to Melan-A, NY-ESO-1, and gp100 antigens in metastatic melanoma. Vaccination against such targets has potential for immunogenicity and may produce an effector-memory T-cell response.Methods
To determine the effect of CTLA-4 blockade on antigen-specific responses following vaccination, in-depth immune monitoring was performed on three ipilimumab-treated patients prevaccinated with gp100 DNA (IMF-24), gp100209?C217 and tyrosinase peptides plus GM-CSF DNA (IMF-32), or NY-ESO-1 protein plus imiquimod (IMF-11); peripheral blood mononuclear cells were analyzed by tetramer and/or intracellular cytokine staining following 10-day culture with HLA-A*0201-restricted gp100209?C217 (ITDQVPFSV), tyrosinase369?C377 (YMDGTMSQV), or 20-mer NY-ESO-1 overlapping peptides, respectively. Tumors from IMF-32 were analyzed by immunohistochemistry to help elucidate mechanism(s) underlying tumor escape.Results
Following vaccination, patients generated weak to no CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell response specific to the vaccine antigen but demonstrated increases in effector-memory (CCR7loCD45RAlo) tetramer+CD8+ T cells. After ipilimumab induction, patients experienced a robust, although sometimes transient, antigen-specific response for gp100 (IMF-32 and IMF-24) or NY-ESO-1 (IMF-11) and produced polyfunctional intracellular cytokines. Primary and metastatic tumors expressed tyrosinase but not gp100 or class I/II MHC molecules.Conclusion
Vaccination induced a measurable antigen-specific T-cell response that increased following CTLA-4 blockade, potentially ??boosting?? the vaccine-primed response. Tumor escape may be related to antigen loss or lack of MHC expression necessary for immune activity. These results in a limited number of patients support the need for further research into combining vaccination with ipilimumab and provide insight into mechanisms underlying tumor escape. 相似文献14.
Bauer C Dauer M Saraj S Schnurr M Bauernfeind F Sterzik A Junkmann J Jakl V Kiefl R Oduncu F Emmerich B Mayr D Mussack T Bruns C Rüttinger D Conrad C Jauch KW Endres S Eigler A 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2011,60(8):1097-1107
Background and aims
Dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccination can induce antitumor T cell responses in vivo. This clinical pilot study examined feasibility and outcome of DC-based tumor vaccination for patients with advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma.Methods
Tumor lysate of patients with pancreatic carcinoma was generated by repeated freeze?Cthaw cycles of surgically obtained tissue specimens. Patients were eligible for DC vaccination after recurrence of pancreatic carcinoma or in a primarily palliative situation. DC were generated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), loaded with autologous tumor lysate, stimulated with TNF-?? and PGE2 and injected intradermally. All patients received concomitant chemotherapy with gemcitabine. Disease response was the primary endpoint. Individual immunological responses to DC vaccination were analyzed by T cell-based immunoassays using pre- and post-vaccination samples of non-adherent PBMC.Results
Twelve patients received DC vaccination and concomitant chemotherapy. One patient developed a partial remission, and two patients remained in stable disease. Median survival was 10.5?months. No severe side effects were observed. Tumor-reactive T cells could be detected prior to vaccination. DC vaccination increased the frequency of tumor-reactive cells in all patients tested; however, the degree of this increase varied. To quantify the presence of tumor-reactive T cells, stimulatory indices (SI) were calculated as the ratio of proliferation-inducing capacity of lysate-loaded versus -unloaded DC. The patient with longest overall survival of 56?months had a high SI of 6.49, indicating that the presence of a pre-vaccination antitumor T cell response might be associated with prolonged survival. Five patients survived 1?year or more.Conclusion
DC-based vaccination can stimulate an antitumoral T cell response in patients with advanced or recurrent pancreatic carcinoma receiving concomitant gemcitabine treatment. 相似文献15.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between left ventricular (LV) dysfunction and arterial wall stiffening.Methods
A total of 218 patients over the age of 45 diagnosed with hypertension in Jinan City and hospitalised between 2010 and 2011 were included in this study. LV function was evaluated using echocardiography (ECHO). Blood pressure was monitored with an automated tonometric device, and the parameters of arterial wall stiffness were measured. In addition, the metabolic parameters of blood samples, such as glucose and lipids, were also determined using the Cobas E601 analyser.Results
Stiffness parameter beta positively correlated with LV diastolic function (E/Em ratio) (r?=?0.255, p?<?0.001). LV end-diastolic diameter not only related to the E/Em ratio (r?=?0.196, p?=?0.009) but also with beta (r?=?0.220, p?=?0.002). The stiffness parameter beta was an early indicator of E/Em ratio as determined by multiple regression analysis (R 2?=?0.381, p?<?0.01). Age, blood pressure and fasting blood glucose contributed to stiffness parameter beta (p?<?0.05), as well as the E/Em ratio (p?<?0.01).Conclusions
Our findings suggested that LV dysfunction may have a direct relationship to arterial stiffening, independently of having similar risk factors. In addition, arterial stiffness can be an independent predictor of LV diastolic function, suggesting that the severity of arterial stiffness directly correlates with the severity of LV dysfunction. 相似文献16.
Christoph Domschke Yingzi Ge Isa Bernhardt Sarah Schott Sophia Keim Simone Juenger Mariana Bucur Luisa Mayer Maria Blumenstein Joachim Rom Joerg Heil Christof Sohn Andreas Schneeweiss Philipp Beckhove Florian Schuetz 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2013,62(6):1053-1060
Background
The bone marrow (BM) of breast cancer patients harbors tumor-reactive memory T cells (TCs) with therapeutic potential. We recently described the immunologic effects of adoptive transfer of ex vivo restimulated tumor-reactive memory TCs from the BM of 12 metastasized breast cancer patients in a clinical phase-I study. In this trial, adoptive T cell transfer resulted in the occurrence of circulating tumor antigen-reactive type-1 TCs. We here describe the long-term clinical outcome and its correlation with tumor-specific cellular immune response in 16 metastasized breast cancer patients, including 12 included in the original study.Methods
Sixteen metastatic breast cancer patients with preexisting tumor-reactive BM memory TCs were included into the study. The study protocol involved one transfusion of TCs which were reactivated in vitro with autologous dendritic cells pulsed with lysates of MCF-7 breast cancer cells as source of tumor antigens. The presence of tumor-reactive memory TCs was analyzed by IFN-γ ELISpot assays.Results
Tumor-reactive memory TCs in the peripheral blood were induced de novo in 7/16 patients (44 %) after adoptive TC transfer. These patients were considered immunologic responders to the therapy. Positive adoptive immunotherapy (ADI) response was observed significantly more often in patients without bone metastases (p = 0.0051), in patients with high levels of tumor-reactive BM TCs prior to therapy (p = 0.036) and correlated significantly with the estimated numbers of transferred tumor-reactive TCs (p = 0.0021). After the treatment, we observed an overall median survival of 33.8 months in the total cohort with three patients alive at last follow-up and more than 7 years after ADI. Numbers of transferred tumor-reactive TCs correlated significantly with the overall survival of patients (p = 0.017). Patients with an immunologic response to ADI in the peripheral blood had a significantly longer median survival than nonresponders (median survival 58.6 vs. 13.6 months; p = 0.009).Conclusion
In metastasized breast cancer patients, adoptive transfer of BM TCs can induce the presence of tumor antigen-reactive type-1 TCs in the peripheral blood. Patients with immunologic response after ADI show a significantly longer overall survival. Patients with bone metastases significantly less frequently respond to the treatment and, therefore, might not be optimal candidates for ADI. Although the present study does not yet prove the therapeutic effect of ADI, these findings shed light on the relation between immune response and cancer prognosis and suggest that transfer of reactivated BM TCs might bear therapeutic potential. 相似文献17.
Hongmei?Luo Yu?Qin Frederic?Reu Sujuan?Ye Yang?Dai Jingcao?Huang Fangfang?Wang Dan?Zhang Ling?Pan Huanling?Zhu Yu?Wu Ting?Niu Zhijian?Xiao Yuhuan?Zheng
Background
Previous research suggested that single gene expression might be correlated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) survival. Therefore, we conducted a systematical analysis for AML prognostic gene expressions.Methods
We performed a microarray-based analysis for correlations between gene expression and adult AML overall survival (OS) using datasets GSE12417 and GSE8970. Positive findings were validated in an independent cohort of 50 newly diagnosed, non-acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) AML patients by quantitative RT-PCR and survival analysis.Results
Microarray-based analysis suggested that expression of eight genes was each associated with 1-year and 3-year AML OS in both GSE12417 and GSE8970 datasets (p?<?0.05). Next, we validated our findings in an independent cohort of AML samples collected in our hospital. We found that ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2E1 (UBE2E1) expression was adversely correlated with AML survival (p?=?0.04). Multivariable analysis showed that UBE2E1 high patients had a significant shorter OS and shorter progression-free survival after adjusting other known prognostic factors (p?=?0.03). At last, we found that UBE2E1 expression was negatively correlated with patients’ response to induction chemotherapy (p?<?0.05).Conclusions
In summary, we demonstrated that UBE2E1 expression was a novel prognostic factor in adult, non-APL AML patients.18.
Background
Injecting drug users (IDU) are at premature risk of developing multimorbidity and mortality from causes commonly observed in the elderly. Ageing of the immune system (immune-senescence) can lead to premature morbidity and mortality and can be accelerated by chronic viral infections. Here we investigated the impact of HCV monoinfection and HIV/HCV coinfection on immune parameters in (ex-) IDU. We analyzed telomere length and expression of activation, differentiation and exhaustion markers on T cells at baseline (t?=?1) and at follow-up (t?=?2) (median interval 16.9 years) in IDU who were: HCV mono-infected (n?=?21); HIV/HCV coinfected (n?=?23) or multiple exposed but uninfected (MEU) (n?=?8).Results
The median time interval between t?=?1 and t?=?2 was 16.9 years. Telomere length within CD4+ and CD8+ T cells decreased significantly over time in all IDU groups (p?≤?0.012). CD4+ T-cell telomere length in HCV mono-infected IDU was significantly reduced compared to healthy donors at t?=?1 (p?<?0.008). HIV/HCV coinfected IDU had reduced CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell telomere lengths (p?≤?0.002) to healthy donors i at t?=?1. This was related to persistent levels of immune activation but not due to increased differentiation of T cells over time. Telomere length decrease was observed within all T-cell subsets, but mainly found in immature T cells (CD27+CD57+) (p?≤?0.015).Conclusions
HCV mono-infection and HIV/HCV coinfection enhance T-cell immune-senescence. Our data suggest that this occurred early during infection, which warrants early treatment for both HCV and HIV to reduce immune senescence in later life.19.
Einar Osland Vik-Mo Marta Nyakas Birthe Viftrup Mikkelsen Morten Carstens Moe Paulina Due-Tønnesen Else Marit Inderberg Suso Stein Sæbøe-Larssen Cecilie Sandberg Jan E. Brinchmann Eirik Helseth Anne-Marie Rasmussen Knut Lote Steinar Aamdal Gustav Gaudernack Gunnar Kvalheim Iver A. Langmoen 《Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII》2013,62(9):1499-1509
Background
The growth and recurrence of several cancers appear to be driven by a population of cancer stem cells (CSCs). Glioblastoma, the most common primary brain tumor, is invariably fatal, with a median survival of approximately 1 year. Although experimental data have suggested the importance of CSCs, few data exist regarding the potential relevance and importance of these cells in a clinical setting.Methods
We here present the first seven patients treated with a dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccine targeting CSCs in a solid tumor. Brain tumor biopsies were dissociated into single-cell suspensions, and autologous CSCs were expanded in vitro as tumorspheres. From these, CSC-mRNA was amplified and transfected into monocyte-derived autologous DCs. The DCs were aliquoted to 9–18 vaccines containing 107 cells each. These vaccines were injected intradermally at specified intervals after the patients had received a standard 6-week course of post-operative radio-chemotherapy. The study was registered with the ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00846456.Results
Autologous CSC cultures were established from ten out of eleven tumors. High-quality RNA was isolated, and mRNA was amplified in all cases. Seven patients were able to be weaned from corticosteroids to receive DC immunotherapy. An immune response induced by vaccination was identified in all seven patients. No patients developed adverse autoimmune events or other side effects. Compared to matched controls, progression-free survival was 2.9 times longer in vaccinated patients (median 694 vs. 236 days, p = 0.0018, log-rank test).Conclusion
These findings suggest that vaccination against glioblastoma stem cells is safe, well-tolerated, and may prolong progression-free survival. 相似文献20.
Xiaodong Guo Lu Xiong Lin Zou Ting Sun Jing Zhang Hanwei Li Ruiyun Peng Jingmin Zhao 《Diagnostic pathology》2012,7(1):1-7