A Phase I Trial of a Recombinant Vaccinia Virus Expressing Prostate-specific Antigen in Advanced Prostate Cancer

A recombinant vaccinia virus encoding human prostate-specific antigen (rV-PSA) was administered as three consecutive monthly doses to 33 men with rising PSA levels after radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, both, or metastatic disease at presentation. Dose levels were 2.65 × 10 6 , 2.65 × 10 7...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical cancer research 2000-05, Vol.6 (5), p.1632
Hauptverfasser: Eder, J P, Kantoff, P W, Roper, K, Xu, G X, Bubley, G J, Boyden, J, Gritz, L, Mazzara, G, Oh, W K, Arlen, P, Tsang, K Y, Panicali, D, Schlom, J, Kufe, D W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A recombinant vaccinia virus encoding human prostate-specific antigen (rV-PSA) was administered as three consecutive monthly doses to 33 men with rising PSA levels after radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, both, or metastatic disease at presentation. Dose levels were 2.65 × 10 6 , 2.65 × 10 7 , and 2.65 × 10 8 plaque forming units. Ten patients who received the highest dose also received 250 μg/m 2 granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) as an immunostimulatory adjunct. No patient experienced any virus-related effects beyond grade I cutaneous toxicity. Pustule formation and/or erythema occurred after the first dose in all 27 men who received≥ 2.65 × 10 7 plaque forming units. GM-CSF administration was associated with fevers and myalgias of grade 2 or lower in 9 of 10 patients. PSA levels in 14 of 33 men treated with rV-PSA with or without GM-CSF were stable for at least 6 months after primary immunization. Nine patients remained stable for 11–25 months; six of these remain progression free with stable PSA levels. Immunological studies demonstrated a specific T-cell response to PSA-3, a 9-mer peptide derived from PSA. rV-PSA is safe and can elicit clinical and immune responses, and certain patients remain without evidence of clinical progression for up to 21 months or longer.
ISSN:1078-0432
1557-3265