Identification of Immunogenic Neo-epitopes for the Development of Personalised Pancreatic Cancer Vaccines
NCT ID: NCT04379960
Last Updated: 2022-09-22
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
192 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2016-09-30
2021-10-31
Brief Summary
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The immune system is capable of recognising and eliminating invading organisms by virtue of differences in their appearance when compared to normal components of the body. Cancer cells also have a different appearance compared to normal cells. However, these differences are often too small and weak to stimulate the immune system sufficiently to respond effectively to eliminate the tumour.
Our aim is to analyse the small differences between healthy and cancer cells in pancreatic cancer patients. Analysis of the genetic information from 100 pancreatic cancer patients has allowed us to design molecules that display each of these small differences. We now intend to analyse each of these, with respect to their ability to stimulate an immune response against cancer. We then intend to take all validated molecules and incorporate them into vaccines carried by viral vectors. These vaccines can be used to train the patient's immune system to respond more effectively when it encounters these particular differences in the patient's body and thus mount an efficient attack on the cancer cells specifically.
Surplus material from blood donations will be used to isolate individual components of the immune system, which can be examined for their response to these altered molecules in the laboratory. On completion of this project, we will have viral vaccine libraries that can be tested in future research projects. Ultimately, we hope to transfer this regime to the clinic by selecting an appropriate viral vaccine library to deliver as a personalised therapeutic that can eliminate cancer and prevent cancer recurrence within each patient.
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Detailed Description
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Hypothesis Sequence analysis has allowed us to develop a peptide library of neo-epitopes that are expressed at high frequency in patient populations and have high binding affinities compared to their wild-type counterpart to HLA-A2, HLA-DP4, HLA-E\*01:01 or HLA-\*01:03 molecules. We hypothesise that a number of these will be sufficiently immunogenic to stimulate a T cell interferon-γ (IFN-γ) response in vitro, that will translate to an in vivo anti-tumour response. Immunogenic neo-epitopes can then be combined in a peptide vaccination program using adjuvants such as oncolytic viruses for targeted delivery and expression within tumours of PDAC patients to stimulate robust and long-term anti-tumour responses.
Aim The initial aim of this project is to perform in vitro validation of neo-epitope candidates selected from available mutanome data to determine their immunogenicity using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy individuals.
Research Plan PBMC samples from healthy individuals will be HLA typed using commercially available reagents from thermofisher scientific. HLA-A2, HLA-DP4, HLA-E\*01:01 and/or HLA-E\*01:03 positive samples will be pulsed with peptides selected after bioinformatics analysis of available sequence data. IFN-γ and interleukin-2 (IL-2) production by the T cells in the samples will be evaluated by ELISA after two rounds of stimulation within a two weeks time as a measure of peptide immunogenicity. Once immunogenic peptides have been identified, their wild-type counterparts will be analysed in parallel to confirm specificity for the mutated epitope. Immunogenic peptides whose wild-type counterparts do not elicit immune responses will then be selected for inclusion in an oncolytic virus-based vaccine to be analysed in vivo using transgenic HLA-A2/HLA-DP4 mice \[17\].
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Peptides
PBMCs will be incubated with peptides.
Peptides
Peptides will be added to PBMCs in in vitro cell culture.
W/o peptides
PBMCs will be incubated without peptides.
Peptides
Peptides will be added to PBMCs in in vitro cell culture.
Interventions
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Peptides
Peptides will be added to PBMCs in in vitro cell culture.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* weigh over 7 stone 12 lbs or 50kg;
* are aged between 17 and 66 (or 70 if you have given blood before);
* are over 70 and have given blood in the last two years.
Exclusion Criteria
* taking medication;
* travelling outside of the UK;
* tattoos;
* pregnancy;
* illness;
* cancer;
* received blood, blood products or organs.
17 Years
70 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Queen Mary University of London
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Barts Cancer Institute
London, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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16/LO/1512
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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