An eight-year randomised, controlled phase III clinical study has shown that a patient-specific therapeutic vaccine, BiovaxID, significantly prolongs disease-free survival in follicular non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The study, which is being featured at the American Society of Clinical Oncology 2009 meeting, found that patients who received the vaccine experienced a median disease-free survival of approximately 44 months compared to approximately 30 months for those who received a control vaccine – an increase of 47 per cent.
BiovaxID is individually manufactured from a tissue biopsy obtained from a patient’s own tumour. The vaccine targets a unique protein (idiotype) expressed by cancerous B cells in follicular lymphoma and spares normal, healthy B cells that do not express the tumour idiotype.
The final vaccine is administered as a subcutaneous injection along with granulocyte-monocyte colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), which together enhance the potency of the immune response induced by BiovaxID. A previous phase II study demonstrated that patients receiving the BiovaxID vaccine develop a highly-specific immune response against tumour cells.
"With this vaccine, we’ve now moved into an era where we can safely use a patient’s immune system to effectively fight follicular lymphoma and enhance the response to conventional chemotherapy," said Dr. Stephen J. Schuster, associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and the study’s lead author. "Because this vaccine uniquely recruits the patient’s immune system to seek and destroy only tumour B cells, this approach may be applicable to the treatment of other B-cell lymphomas."
The study achieved its primary endpoint of prolonging disease-free survival in patients vaccinated with BiovaxID after achieving a complete response to chemotherapy. In the study, 177 patients with follicular lymphoma who had achieved a complete response to PACE (prednisone, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide and etoposide) chemotherapy were randomized to the BiovaxID vaccine arm (vaccine plus KLH/GMCSF) or to the control arm (KLH/GM-CSF alone). Investigators analysed the cohort of 117 patients who, as per study protocol requirements, maintained a complete response to chemotherapy for at least six months and received active (76 patients) or control (41 patients) vaccine. After a median follow-up of 4.71 years (56.6 months, range: 12.6 - 89.3 months), the median disease-free survival in the BiovaxID arm was 44.2 months compared with 30.6 months in the control arm, which is a statistically significant difference.
BiovaxID demonstrated a favorable safety profile and was very well-tolerated by patients. Further studies are planned to examine the role of BiovaxID in patients with other B-cell lymphomas and as maintenance therapy in patients with follicular lymphoma.
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