The trial "A Phase 1 Study to Determine the Immunologic Effects of a MAGE- A1, MAGE- A3, NY-ESO-1 Vaccine in Patients With High Risk Neuroblastoma, Osteogenic Sarcoma, and Rhabdomyosarcoma" is being offered at Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital. The purpose of this phase 1 study is to determine the safety and immunological effects of a new antibody targeted dendritic cell vaccine. The hypothesis behind the vaccine is that it could reduce the risk of relapse.
The study is in two parts. First, each patient will be screened for the presence of 3 antigens, MAGE-A1, MAGE-A3, and NY-ESO-1. These antigens can be found in fairly significant quantities on neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and osteogenic sarcoma cells. 70% of neuroblastoma tumors will express at least one of these antigens. Those testing positive for one or more of these antigens will then be consented for the treatment phase. An individualized vaccine will be developed and administered using your child's own dendritic cells. After about 1 month, each patient will receive a series of 3 vaccines containing 3,000,000-5,000,000 peptide pulsed dendritic cells at two week intervals. Prior to injection they will also receive Imiquimod, a topical cream, which is believed to help the immune cells travel to the tumor.
Understanding how tumor cell antigens and dendritic cell vaccines work together is a bit of a complicated subject. Essentially, dendritic cells break the antigens on the cancer cell surfaces into smaller pieces. The dendritic cells then act as most-wanted posters for the immune system, displaying those antigen pieces to the killer T cells. To make a dendritic cell vaccine, scientists extract some of the patient's dendritic cells and use immune cell stimulants to reproduce large amounts of dendritic cells in the lab. These dendritic cells are then exposed to antigens from the patient's cancer cells. This combination of dendritic cells and antigens is then injected into the patient, and the dendritic cells work to program the T cells, hopefully, forming an attack against the tumor cells.
Most important to any family of a child with neuroblastoma, however, are the questions of:
- Will it work? and
- What are the risks?
More information and contact information on this trial can be found here:
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00944580
4 comments:
Ah the elusive NB vaccine. In Aug of 2005 Nathan was to be one of the first to receive it after he reached NED after his first relapse.
Four years later - I really hope it was worth all the delays and actually works.
Hello Susan can i have your email? I have Any question about the vaccine. My mail adres is yk1311@gmail.com
Hello Susan can i have your email? I have Any question about the vaccine. My mail adres is yk1311@gmail.com
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