Adjuvant dendritic cell therapy in stage IIIB/C melanoma: the MIND-DC randomized phase III trial
-
Published:2024-02-23
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:
-
ISSN:2041-1723
-
Container-title:Nature Communications
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Bol Kalijn F., Schreibelt GertyORCID, Bloemendal Martine, van Willigen Wouter W., Hins-de Bree Simone, de Goede Anna L., de Boer Annemiek J., Bos Kevin J. H., Duiveman-de Boer Tjitske, Olde Nordkamp Michel A. M., van Oorschot Tom G. M., Popelier Carlijn J., Pots Jeanne M., Scharenborg Nicole M., van de Rakt Mandy W. M. M., de Ruiter Valeska, van Meeteren Wilmy S., van Rossum Michelle M., Croockewit Sandra J., Koeneman Bouke J.ORCID, Creemers Jeroen H. A.ORCID, Wortel Inge M. N.ORCID, Angerer Caroline, Brüning Mareke, Petry Katja, Dzionek Andrzej, van der Veldt Astrid A., van Grünhagen Dirk J.ORCID, Werner Johanna E. M., Bonenkamp Johannes J., Haanen John B. A. G.ORCID, Boers-Sonderen Marye J., Koornstra Rutger H. T., Boomsma Martijn F., Aarntzen Erik H. J., Gotthardt Martin, Nagarajah James, de Witte Theo J. M.ORCID, Figdor Carl G.ORCID, de Wilt Johannes H. W.ORCID, Textor JohannesORCID, de Groot Jan Willem B., Gerritsen Winald R.ORCID, de Vries I. Jolanda M.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractAutologous natural dendritic cells (nDCs) treatment can induce tumor-specific immune responses and clinical responses in cancer patients. In this phase III clinical trial (NCT02993315), 148 patients with resected stage IIIB/C melanoma were randomized to adjuvant treatment with nDCs (n = 99) or placebo (n = 49). Active treatment consisted of intranodally injected autologous CD1c+ conventional and plasmacytoid DCs loaded with tumor antigens. The primary endpoint was the 2-year recurrence-free survival (RFS) rate, whereas the secondary endpoints included median RFS, 2-year and median overall survival, adverse event profile, and immunological response The 2-year RFS rate was 36.8% in the nDC treatment group and 46.9% in the control group (p = 0.31). Median RFS was 12.7 months vs 19.9 months, respectively (hazard ratio 1.25; 90% CI: 0.88−1.79; p = 0.29). Median overall survival was not reached in both treatment groups (hazard ratio 1.32; 90% CI: 0.73−2.38; p = 0.44). Grade 3−4 study-related adverse events occurred in 5% and 6% of patients. Functional antigen-specific T cell responses could be detected in 67.1% of patients tested in the nDC treatment group vs 3.8% of patients tested in the control group (p < 0.001). In conclusion, while adjuvant nDC treatment in stage IIIB/C melanoma patients generated specific immune responses and was well tolerated, no benefit in RFS was observed.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference43 articles.
1. Banchereau, J. & Steinman, R. M. Dendritic cells and the control of immunity. Nature 392, 245–252 (1998). 2. Palucka, K. & Banchereau, J. Cancer immunotherapy via dendritic cells. Nat. Rev. Cancer 12, 265–277 (2012). 3. Baraibar, I., Melero, I., Ponz-Sarvise, M. & Castanon, E. Safety and tolerability of immune checkpoint inhibitors (PD-1 and PD-L1) in Cancer. Drug Saf. 42, 281–294 (2019). 4. Anguille, S., Smits, E. L., Lion, E., van Tendeloo, V. F. & Berneman, Z. N. Clinical use of dendritic cells for cancer therapy. Lancet Oncol. 15, e257–e267 (2014). 5. Soruri, A. et al. IL-4 down-regulates anaphylatoxin receptors in monocytes and dendritic cells and impairs anaphylatoxin-induced migration in vivo. J. Immunol. 170, 3306–3314 (2003).
|
|