Abstract PR20: A novel combination immunotherapy with a vaccine targeting tumor neoepitopes that mediates immune cascade in murine tumor models

2020 
Clinical successes utilizing checkpoint inhibitors demonstrate the potential of immune-based therapies for the treatment of cancer. Research suggests that these successes are a result of T cells recognizing nonsynonymous mutations uniquely expressed by a patient’s tumor. The advent of comparative tumor-normal DNA sequencing and tumor RNA sequencing for accurate prediction of presented somatic mutations has made it possible to rapidly identify these neoepitopes, allowing for the development of personalized cancer vaccines. However, such vaccines are often ineffective due to the immunosuppressive nature of the tumor microenvironment, and their clinical efficacies would be improved when used in an orchestrated combination approach with additional immune-oncology agents. In the present study, we investigated the combination of three immune-oncology agents, each targeting a unique mechanism of immune therapy, with a vaccine targeting tumor neoepitopes. We combined a neoepitope vaccine, delivered as a peptide or via a novel E2b-deleted adenovirus vehicle, with N-IL15 (previously called ALT-803), an IL-15 superagonist, to enhance the development of antigen-specific immunity; NHS-IL12, a tumor-targeting IL-12 molecule, to promote the maintenance and expansion of T cells within the tumor microenvironment; and PD-L1 blockade to decrease immune cell exhaustion within the tumor microenvironment. This combination therapy resulted in the regression of established tumors, which associated with the generation of robust immunity against neoepitopes contained in the vaccine. It also showed evidence of inducing a neoepitope cascade by causing development of T-cell responses to neoepitopes expressed by the tumor but not contained within the vaccine. This report is the first demonstration of an E2b-deleted adenovirus neoantigen vaccine generating robust immunity. Together, this study demonstrates the importance of a multifaceted, orchestrated treatment regimen to promote the generation of effective antitumor immunity. This abstract is also being presented as Poster A18. Citation Format: Karin L. Lee, Claudia Palena, John Lee, Kayvan Niazi, Andrew Nguyen, Frank Jones, Shahrooz Rabizadeh, Patrick Soon-Shiong, Jeffrey Schlom, Duane H. Hamilton. A novel combination immunotherapy with a vaccine targeting tumor neoepitopes that mediates immune cascade in murine tumor models [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy; 2018 Nov 27-30; Miami Beach, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2020;8(4 Suppl):Abstract nr PR20.
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