Dendritic Cell Immunotherapy Promising in HLA-A2-Positive Glioblastoma

Article

HLA-A2-positive glioblastoma patients experienced more frequent immune responses to the dendritic-cell immunotherapy IDT-107, responses that may be associated with improved survival.

Patients with HLA-A2–positive glioblastoma multiforme experienced more frequent immune responses to the dendritic-cell immunotherapy IDT-107 than other patients, and immune response appears to be associated with improved survival in these patients, according to results from a phase II study presented the 20th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Society for Neuro-Oncology, held November 19-22 in San Antonio, Texas.  

“HLA-A2–positive immune responders had longer progression-free survival (PFS) than nonresponders,” reported coauthor John S. Yu, MD, founder of ImmunoCellular Therapeutics. The median PFS for responders was 11.2 months vs 7.7 months among nonresponders (P = .032), he said. “The clear association between immune response and survival is an important finding that we believe validates the immunotherapeutic mechanism of ICT-107.”

A total of 124 patients were enrolled in the study and randomized 2:1 to receive either ICT-107 or unincubated dendritic cells. ICT-107 consists of autologous dendritic cells incubated with six synthetic peptide CTL epitopes that target glioblastoma tumor– and stem cell–associated antigens.

Using ELISPOT immunologic assay, which measures the number of peripheral antigen-specific CTLs that secrete IFN-gamma, the researchers used a “novel analytical method factoring in four metrics of response including magnitude of response and statistical significance” to identify responders. Sixty percent of HLA-A2–positive patients receiving ICT-107 experienced a significantly increased immune response, compared with 36% of patients in the control group, reported Yu.

Among HLA-A2–positive patients, IL-12 secretion by dendritic cells was associated with immune response, Dr. Yu reported.

“There was no impact of MGMT status on outcomes,” he noted.

An unexpected increase was reported for immune response in some control patients after treatment with unincubated dendritic cells, possibly suggesting that activated dendritic cells without peptide loading is immunologically active, Dr. Yu noted. The phase III trial uses autologous monocytes instead of activated dendritic cells, as a control-arm treatment.

Recent Videos
Shwetal Mehta, PhD, describes efforts regarding the development of protein degraders and antibody-drug conjugates in the neuro-oncology field.
Liquid biopsy tests may help determine the extent of activity among patients who receive a novel fourth-generation EGFR inhibitor for brain cancer.
Shwetal Mehta, PhD, highlights novel brain cancer drug development procedures in the clinical lab and pre-clinical arms of the Ivy Brain Tumor Center.
Raymond B. Mailhot, MD, MPH, discussed how radiation therapy can impact education and survivorship for pediatric survivors of brain tumors.
Significant results from a retrospective analysis of brain tumor survivor academic performance after radiotherapy emerged despite small sampling size.
Raymond B. Mailhot, MD, MPH, discussed methods for comparing academic performances of patients following radiation therapy with healthy control groups.
The act of asking for help is critical to finding mentors who can help one advance in the brain cancer field, according to Yoshie Umemura, MD.
Through multidisciplinary collaboration, Yoshie Umemura, MD, and colleagues were able to organize the Gliofocus trial in brain cancer relatively fast.
Yoshie Umemura, MD, discusses how multiple departments can positively impact a patient with brain cancer during their visit to a medical center.
Antibody-drug conjugates and small molecule inhibitors may show utility in the neuro-oncology field, according to Nader Sanai, MD.