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| Title: | Clinical-grade manufacturing of autologous mature mRNA-electroporated dendritic cells and safety testing in acute myeloid leukemia patients in a phase I dose-escalation clinical trial. |
| Author(s): | Driessche, A. Van Velde, A.L. Van de Nijs, G. Braeckman, T. Stein, B. Vries, I.J.M. de (162370016) Berneman, Z.N. Tendeloo, V.F. Van |
| Publication year: | 2009 |
| Document type: | Article / Letter to editor |
| Journal: | Cytotherapy |
| ISSN: | 1465-3249 |
| Volume: | vol. 11 |
| Issue: | iss. 5 |
| Start page: | p. 653 |
| End page: | p. 668 |
| Abstract: | BACKGROUND AIMS: RNA-electroporated dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccines are rapidly gaining interest as therapeutic cancer vaccines. We report on a phase I dose-escalation trial using clinical-grade manufactured mature RNA-electroporated DC in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients. METHODS: CD14(+) cells were isolated from leukapheresis products by immunomagnetic CliniMACS separation and differentiated into mature DC (mDC). mDC were electroporated with clinical-grade mRNA encoding the Wilm's tumor (WT1) antigen, and tested for viability, phenotype, sterility and recovery. To test product safety, increasing doses of DC were administered intradermally four times at 2-week intervals in 10 AML patients. RESULTS: In a pre-clinical phase, immunomagnetic monocyte isolation proved superior over plastic adherence in terms of DC purity and lymphocyte contamination. We also validated a simplified DC maturation protocol yielding a consistent phenotype, migration and allogeneic T-cell stimulatory capacity in AML patients in remission. In the clinical trial, highly purified CD14(+) cells (94.5+/-3.4%) were obtained from all patients. A monocyte-to-mDC conversion factor of 25+/-10% was reached. All DC preparations exhibited high expression of mDC markers. Despite a decreased cell recovery of mDC after a combination of mRNA electroporation and cryopreservation, successful vaccine preparations were obtained in all AML patients. DC injections were well tolerated by all patients. CONCLUSIONS: Our method yields a standardized, simplified and reproducible preparation of multiple doses of clinical-grade mRNA-transfected DC vaccines from a single apheresis with consistent mature phenotype, recovery, sterility and viability. Intradermal injection of such DC vaccines in AML patients is safe. |
| Subject: | NCMLS 1B: Immune Regulation |
| Organization: | UMCN Extern Tumorimmunology |
| Appears in Collections: | Academic bibliography
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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2066/79721
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