IV Administration Improves Tumor-Fighting Action, NIH Researchers Find
From: National Institutes of Health
November 10, 2022 -- An experimental therapeutic
cancer vaccine induced two distinct and desirable immune system responses that
led to significant tumor regression in mice, report investigators from the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the
National Institutes of Health.
The researchers found
that intravenous (IV) administration of the vaccine boosted the number of
cytotoxic T cells capable of infiltrating and attacking tumor cells and engaged
the innate immune system by inducing type I interferon. The innate immune
response modified the tumor microenvironment, counteracting suppressive forces
that otherwise would tamp down T-cell action. Modification of the tumor
microenvironment was not seen in mice that received the vaccine via needle
injection into the skin (subcutaneous administration).
Dubbed “vax-innate” by
the scientific team, the approach achieves an important goal in the quest for
more effective immunotherapeutic vaccines for cancer. The study demonstrates
that IV vaccine delivery enables and enhances T-cell immunity by overcoming
tumor-induced immunosuppressive activity. The researchers say the candidate
vaccine might also be given intravenously to people who have already received
tumor-specific T cells as a therapy. It also could improve tumor control by
increasing the number of T cells and altering the tumor microenvironment to
make them function better, the researchers note.
The experimental
vaccine, SNAPvax, was designed by Robert Seder, M.D., and colleagues at the
NIAID Vaccine Research Center (VRC) together with collaborators from Vaccitech
North America, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company in Baltimore,
Maryland. Vaccitech announced plans to advance the SNAPvax platform for use in
treating human papilloma virus-associated cancer in 2023.
https://www.niaid.nih.gov/news-events/experimental-cancer-vaccine-shows-promise-animal-studies
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