AI Article Synopsis

  • The novel therapeutic vaccine hVEGF/RFASE showed a good safety profile in cancer patients but failed to induce the expected immune response against native VEGF.
  • Although hVEGF/RFASE developed neutralizing antibodies in a nonhuman primate model, this was not replicated in humans, raising concerns about translating animal findings to human efficacy.
  • The phase I clinical trial highlighted that while the vaccine did not cause significant toxicity, it did not lead to a decrease in circulating VEGF levels or provide clinical benefits to the patients involved.

Article Abstract

Lessons Learned: The novel therapeutic vaccine hVEGF /RFASE was found to be safe and well tolerated in patients with cancer. hVEGF /RFASE failed to induce seroconversion against native hVEGF and, accordingly, neither a decrease in circulating vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) levels nor clinical benefit was observed. Remarkably, hVEGF /RFASE induced VEGF -neutralizing antibodies in a nonhuman primate model. The absence of seroconversion in human calls for caution in the interpretation of efficacy of human vaccines in nonhuman primates.

Background: Targeting vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF) is a well-established anticancer therapy. We designed a first-in-human clinical trial to investigate the safety and immunogenicity of the novel vaccine hVEGF /RFASE.

Methods: Patients with advanced solid malignancies with no standard treatment options available were eligible for this phase I study with a 3+3 dose-escalation design. On days 0, 14, and 28, patients received intramuscular hVEGF , a truncated synthetic three-dimensional (3D)-structured peptide mimic covering the amino acids 26-104 of the human VEGF isoform, emulsified in the novel adjuvant Raffinose Fatty Acid Sulphate Ester (RFASE), a sulpholipopolysaccharide. Objectives were to determine safety, induction of VEGF-neutralizing antibodies, and the maximum tolerated dose. Blood was sampled to measure VEGF levels and antibody titers.

Results: Eighteen of 27 enrolled patients received three immunizations in six different dose-levels up to 1,000 μg hVEGF and 40 mg RFASE. No dose-limiting toxicity was observed. Although in four patients an antibody titer against hVEGF was induced (highest titer: 2.77 log), neither a reduction in VEGF levels nor neutralizing antibodies against native VEGF were detected.

Conclusion: Despite having an attractive safety profile, hVEGF /RFASE was not able to elicit seroconversions against native VEGF and, consequently, did not decrease circulating VEGF levels. Deficient RFASE adjuvant activity, as well as dominant immunoreactivity toward neoepitopes, may have impeded hVEGF /RFASE's efficacy in humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7873342PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/onco.13576DOI Listing

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