Peptide Vaccinations to Treat Patients With Low-Risk Myeloid Cancers
NCT ID: NCT00488592
Last Updated: 2021-07-12
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
10 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2007-06-30
2010-04-30
Brief Summary
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People 18 years of age or older with MDS, AML or CML may be eligible for this study.
Participants receive six injections of the vaccines, one dose every other week for a total of 10 weeks. The injections are given in the upper arm, upper leg, or abdomen. A separate injection of GM-CSF is given in the same area as the vaccine injections. Subjects are observed for 2 hours after the first vaccination and at least 30 minutes after each subsequent vaccination for allergic reactions. In addition to the vaccination, subjects undergo the following:
* History and physical exam, chest x-ray, blood tests and bone marrow aspirate and biopsy before starting the vaccinations.
* Safety monitoring during vaccine administration (every other week for 10 weeks) with blood tests and check of vital signs.
* Follow-up safety monitoring (weeks 12 and 16) with blood tests every visit, chest x-ray at week 12 and bone marrow biopsy visit 16.
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Detailed Description
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The immunological graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect seen after allogeneic stem cell transplantation suggests that stimulating the patient's own T cell responses to MDS and leukemia with a vaccine might also retard disease progression and even achieve disease remissions. Peptide (WT1) and peptide (PR1) were identified as target antigens because both antigens are highly expressed by cluster of differentiation 34 (CD34) plus stem cells of most patients with myeloid malignancies but not by normal marrow cells. An immunotherapeutic approach to vaccinate against PR1 and WT1 antigens could induce T cell response against MDS and leukemic cells while sparing normal cells and by using a combination of two antigens the risk of disease escape by antigen down regulation should be further diminished. Indeed in a safety study of one dose of a combination of peptide (PRl) and (WT1) vaccination, we demonstrated that immunological response against one or both vaccines could be induced in all subjects who were vaccinated. This immunological response was associated with a transient reduction in the leukemia burden. Furthermore the vaccine combination was well tolerated.
Therefore we propose this Phase II trial, the third in a series of planned peptide vaccine research protocols, which will evaluate the safety and efficacy associated with an immunotherapy approach using two peptide vaccines, namely PR 1 : 169- 177 and WT-1: 126-1 34 in Montanide adjuvant, administered concomitantly with GM-CSF (Sargramostim), every 2 weeks for 10 weeks (6 doses WT1 plus 6 doses PRl plus GM-CSF) in select patients diagnosed with MDS, AML or CML. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines will have the option of receiving an additional 6 boosters of the WT-1:126-135 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
The primary objective will be to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity associated with 6 doses of a combination of WT-1: 126-134 and PRl: 169-177 peptide vaccines in Montanide adjuvant administered concomitantly with GMCSF (Sargramostim) in selected patients with myeloid malignancies (MDS, AML, CML).
The primary endpoint will be immune response (studying changes in the frequencies of circulating PR1 and WT1 specific T cells) which will serves as a surrogate for evaluating for the efficacy of the study.
Secondary Endpoints will include changes in marrow blast cells, blood counts, transfusion dependence, time to disease progression and survival.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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PR1/WT1 Vaccine Response in Participants With Low-Risk Myeloid Cancers
Subjects were given 6 subcutaneous injects of PR1:169-177 in "Montanide" adjuvant and 6 subcutaneous injections of WT1:126-134 in "Montanide" adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
WT1:126-134
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in "Montanide" adjuvant and 6 doses of WT1:126-134 in "Montanide" adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
PR1:169-177 Peptide
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
GM-CSF (Sargramostim)
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
Montanide adjuvant
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
Interventions
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WT1:126-134
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in "Montanide" adjuvant and 6 doses of WT1:126-134 in "Montanide" adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
PR1:169-177 Peptide
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
GM-CSF (Sargramostim)
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
Montanide adjuvant
Subjects were given 6 doses of PR1:169-177 in montanide adjuvant and 6 doses of WT-1:126-134 in Montanide adjuvant at 2 weekly intervals. The peptides were injected in the deep subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall, the thighs or the upper arms near the deltoid region. The sites of injection were rotated every 2 weeks. GM-CSF (Sargramostim) was co administered with each vaccine dose. Subjects with immunological response to one or both peptide vaccines had the option of receiving a maximum of 6 additional boosters of the WT-1:126-134 and PR1:169-177 peptide vaccines at 3 monthly intervals.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
OR
Diagnosed with AML and in complete remission within 5 years of treatment with less than 5% marrow blasts
OR
Diagnosed with CML in chronic phase
Unsuitable for stem cell transplantation (SCT) (age over sixty or unavailability of a fully-matched donor)
or
made an informed decision not to undergo the transplant procedure
or
are between 6 months 3 years following allogeneic SCT and fulfill the following criteria:
100% donor engraftment,
Less than 5% blasts in marrow
normal marrow cellularity
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA-A020 1) positive at one allele
Ages 18-85 years old
Off all lympho-ablative chemotherapeutic agents
Exclusion Criteria
* Relapsed AML
* CML in accelerated phase or blast crisis
* Hypocellular bone marrow (less than 20%)
* History of Wegener's granulomatosis
* Serologic antibody against proteinase-3 (ANCA positive)
* Previous allergic reaction to Montanide Adjuvant
* Positive test for HIV
* Treatment with systemic corticosteroids or immunosuppressants within 14 days prior to study entry
* Co-morbidity of such severity that it would preclude the patient's ability to tolerate protocol therapy
* Predicted survival less than 28 days
* Pregnant or breast feeding (All female patients must have a urine pregnancy test within 1 week prior to vaccine administration)
* Unwilling to practice abstinence or effective contraception (men and women) during the study period.
* Enrolled in another drug or vaccine clinical trial during the study period
* Inability to comprehend the investigational nature of the study and provide informed consent
18 Years
85 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
NIH
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Minocher Battiwalla, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Institutes of Health- NHLBI
Locations
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National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Rezvani K, Yong AS, Mielke S, Jafarpour B, Savani BN, Le RQ, Eniafe R, Musse L, Boss C, Kurlander R, Barrett AJ. Repeated PR1 and WT1 peptide vaccination in Montanide-adjuvant fails to induce sustained high-avidity, epitope-specific CD8+ T cells in myeloid malignancies. Haematologica. 2011 Mar;96(3):432-40. doi: 10.3324/haematol.2010.031674. Epub 2010 Dec 6.
Related Links
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NIH Clinical Center Detailed Web Page
Other Identifiers
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07-H-0159
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
070159
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
NCT00499772
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: nct_alias
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