Personalized RNA neoantigen vaccines stimulate T cells in pancreatic cancer. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is lethal in 88% of patients1, yet harbours mutation-derived T cell neoantigens that are suitable for vaccines 2,3. Here in a phase I trial of adjuvant autogene cevumeran, an individualized neoantigen vaccine based on uridine mRNA-lipoplex nanoparticles, we synthesized mRNA neoantigen vaccines in real time from surgically resected PDAC tumours. After surgery, we sequentially administered atezolizumab (an anti-PD-L1 immunotherapy), autogene cevumeran (a maximum of 20 neoantigens per patient) and a modified version of a four-drug chemotherapy regimen (mFOLFIRINOX, comprising folinic acid, fluorouracil, irinotecan and oxaliplatin). The end points included vaccine-induced neoantigen-specific T cells by high-threshold assays, 18-month recurrence-free survival and oncologic feasibility. We treated 16 patients with atezolizumab and autogene cevumeran, then 15 patients with mFOLFIRINOX. Autogene cevumeran was administered within 3 days of benchmarked times, was tolerable and induced de novo high-magnitude neoantigen-specific T cells in 8 out of 16 patients, with half targeting more than one vaccine neoantigen. Using a new mathematical strategy to track T cell clones (CloneTrack) and functional assays, we found that vaccine-expanded T cells comprised up to 10% of all blood T cells, re-expanded with a vaccine booster and included long-lived polyfunctional neoantigen-specific effector CD8+ T cells. At 18-month median follow-up, patients with vaccine-expanded T cells (responders) had a longer median recurrence-free survival (not reached) compared with patients without vaccine-expanded T cells (non-responders; 13.4 months, P = 0.003). Differences in the immune fitness of the patients did not confound this correlation, as responders and non-responders mounted equivalent immunity to a concurrent unrelated mRNA vaccine against SARS-CoV-2. Thus, adjuvant atezolizumab, autogene cevumeran and mFOLFIRINOX induces substantial T cell activity that may correlate with delayed PDAC recurrence.

authors

  • Rojas, Luis A
  • Sethna, Zachary
  • Soares, Kevin
  • Olcese, Cristina
  • Pang, Nan
  • Patterson, Erin
  • Lihm, Jayon
  • Ceglia, Nicholas
  • Guasp, Pablo
  • Chu, Alexander
  • Yu, Rebecca
  • Chandra, Adrienne Kaya
  • Waters, Theresa
  • Ruan, Jennifer
  • Amisaki, Masataka
  • Zebboudj, Abderezak
  • Odgerel, Zagaa
  • Payne, George
  • Derhovanessian, Evelyna
  • Müller, Felicitas
  • Rhee, Ina
  • Yadav, Mahesh
  • Dobrin, Anton
  • Sadelain, Michel
  • Łuksza, Marta
  • Cohen, Noah
  • Tang, Laura
  • Basturk, Olca
  • Gönen, Mithat
  • Katz, Seth
  • Do, Richard Kinh
  • Epstein, Andrew S
  • Momtaz, Parisa
  • Park, Wungki
  • Sugarman, Ryan
  • Varghese, Anna M
  • Won, Elizabeth
  • Desai, Avni
  • Wei, Alice C
  • D'Angelica, Michael I
  • Kingham, T. Peter
  • Mellman, Ira
  • Merghoub, Taha
  • Wolchok, Jedd D
  • Sahin, Ugur
  • Türeci, Özlem
  • Greenbaum, Benjamin D
  • Jarnagin, William R
  • Drebin, Jeffrey
  • O'Reilly, Eileen M
  • Balachandran, Vinod P

publication date

  • May 10, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Antigens, Neoplasm
  • COVID-19
  • Cancer Vaccines
  • Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal
  • Lymphocyte Activation
  • Pancreatic Neoplasms
  • T-Lymphocytes

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC10171177

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85057093998

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1093/nar/gky1015

PubMed ID

  • 37165196

Additional Document Info