Targeting Antigens in the Development of Vaccines for Cancer

Commentary
Video

Analyzing the KRAS mutation across various cancer types may be a worthwhile target when using a cancer vaccine or immunotherapy, says Catherine J. Wu, MD.

Defining alternative, targetable antigens that may have an impact on treatment is a key area in the research of cancer vaccines, especially for patients with tumors that have a low mutation burden, according to Catherine J. Wu, MD.

Wu, chief of the Division of Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapies and a Lavine Family Chair for Preventative Cancer Therapies at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and a professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, spoke with CancerNetwork® about potential antigen targets that may enhance the efficacy of vaccine-based treatment for patients with cancer.

She said that neoantigens have demonstrated promise as a target for cancer vaccines and that the KRAS mutation may be an actionable target with this strategy in those with gastrointestinal cancers and other solid tumor types. However, she stated that using vaccines to treat patients with cancers that harbor a lower mutation burden is a current challenge in the field.

Transcript:

Neoantigens have shown a lot of promise as antigens to target for immunotherapy. There aren’t many shared neoantigens that have been well vetted out. I would say that the front-runner right now is the KRAS mutation that’s been observed in a lot of gastrointestinal cancers, myeloma, and some of the other solid tumors. There has been considerable progress in vetting these targets not only for cancer vaccines but also for cellular therapy. I do anticipate that this is going to be an area of focus in the time to come.

For cancer vaccines to work, we need to have knowledge of the antigens that we’re going to use to target and use the vaccine to stimulate an antigen-specific immune response. Currently, the areas of challenge are those cancers that have either a lower mutation burden, defined as those that have lower single nucleotide variants, or a low number of insertion deletions. We do know that these lower mutation burden tumors, in all probability, have other types of genomic alterations, but there is a gap in our computational pipelines in terms of how we can identify them. For example, they may be gene fusions, they may be the sequelae of structural variants, they could also be in alternate open reading frames, or they could be related to splice variants. And so, the major thrust of the current ongoing research is how we can best define these alternate antigens that may be impactful for these lower mutation burden tumors that are still an unmet need. [Additionally], better therapies are required.

Recent Videos
Social workers and case managers may have access to institutional- or hospital-level grants that can reduce financial toxicity for patients undergoing cancer therapy.
Genetic backgrounds and ancestry may hold clues for better understanding pancreatic cancer, which may subsequently mitigate different disparities.
Factors like genetic mutations and smoking may represent red flags in pancreatic cancer detection, said Jose G. Trevino, II, MD, FACS.
Insurance and distance to a tertiary cancer center were 2 barriers to receiving high-quality breast cancer care, according to Rachel Greenup, MD, MPH.
Numerous clinical trials vindicating the addition of immunotherapy to first-line chemotherapy in SCLC have emerged over the last several years.
According to John Henson, MD, “What we need are better treatments to control the [brain] tumor once it’s detected.”
First-degree relatives of patients who passed away from pancreatic cancer should be genetically tested to identify their risk for the disease.
Surgery and radiation chemotherapy can affect immunotherapy’s ability to target tumor cells in the nervous system, according to John Henson, MD.
Thinking about how to sequence additional agents following targeted therapy may be a key consideration in the future of lung cancer care.
Endobronchial ultrasound, robotic bronchoscopy, or other expensive procedures may exacerbate financial toxicity for patients seeking lung cancer care.
Related Content