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Peptide vaccinations elicited strong immune responses that were reboosted by anti-PD1 therapy in a patient with myxofibrosarcoma.

Tomohide TsukaharaKazue WatanabeKenji MurataAkari TakahashiEmi MizushimaYuji ShibayamaHidekazu KameshimaRyo HataeYasuo OhnoRituko KawaharaAiko MuraiMunehide NakatsugawaTerufumi KuboTakayuki KanasekiYoshihiko HirohashiTakeshi TeruiHiroko AsanumaTadashi HasegawaNoriyuki SatoToshihiko Torigoe
Published in: Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII (2019)
Peptide-based immunotherapy does not usually elicit strong immunological and clinical responses in patients with end-stage cancer, including sarcoma. Here we report a myxofibrosarcoma patient who showed a strong clinical response to peptide vaccinations and whose immune responses were reboosted by anti-PD1 therapy combined with peptide vaccinations. The 46-year-old man showed a strong response to the peptide vaccinations (papillomavirus binding factor peptide, survivin-2B peptide, incomplete Freund's adjuvant, and polyethylene glycol-conjugated interferon-alpha 2a) and subsequent wide necrosis and massive infiltration of CD8+ T cells in a recurrent tumor. The patient's immune responses weakened after surgical resection; however, they were reboosted following the administration of nivolumab combined with peptide vaccinations. Thus, anti-PD1 therapy combined with peptide vaccinations might be beneficial, as suggested by the observations in this sarcoma patient.
Keyphrases
  • immune response
  • early stage
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • toll like receptor
  • transcription factor