Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Tsunedomi Ryouichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 1000361639
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

IgG response to MHC class I epitope peptides is a quantitative predictive biomarker in the early course of treatment of colorectal cancer using therapeutic peptides

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Shinsuke Kanekiyo
Shoichi Hazama
Hiroko Takenouchi
Masao Nakajima
Yoshitaro Shindo
Hiroto Matsui
Yukio Tokumitsu
Shinobu Tomochika
Ryouichi Tsunedomi
Yoshihiro Tokuhisa
Michihisa Iida
Kazuhiko Sakamoto
Nobuaki Suzuki
Shigeru Takeda
Shigeru Yamamoto
Shigefumi Yoshino
Kiyotaka Okuno
Keiko Udaka
Yutaka Kawakami
Satoko Matsueda
Kyogo Ito
Hiroaki Nagano

Summary

Cancer vaccines have been developed as a new therapeutic approach, however, their clinical benefit remains limited. We previously performed a phase II study for advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) using five human leukocyte antigen (HLA-A*24:02)-restricted peptides derived from kinase of the outer chloroplast membrane 1, translocase of outer mitochondrial membrane 34 (TOMM34), ring finger protein 43 (RNF43), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR1) and VEGFR2. In the present study the relationship between overall survival (OS) and several biomarkers, including cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses to these five peptides, was investigated. In 89 advanced CRC patients treated with a combination therapy consisting of these five peptides and oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, plasma was collected before and after 3 months of vaccine administration. IgGs reactive to each of the five peptides were assessed using the multiplex bead suspension Luminex system. Antigen-specific T-cell responses were estimated by enzyme-linked immunoSpot assay. Plasma levels of TOMM34 IgG (P<0.001), RNF43 IgG (P<0.001) and VEGFR2 IgG (P<0.001) were significantly increased after vaccination and stronger VEGFR2 IgG responses correlated significantly with OS in HLA-matched patients (P=0.034). CTL responses to VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 were also significantly increased in the HLA-matched group (P=0.049 and P<0.001, respectively). However, increased CTL response did not correlate with OS. Multivariate analysis indicated that IgG responses to VEGFR2 were the most significant predictor for OS in the HLA-A*24:02-matched group (P=0.04). Our findings indicated that VEGFR2 IgG responses may be an important immunological biomarker in the early course of treatment for CRC patients treated with therapeutic epitope peptides.

Magazine(name)

Oncology Reports

Publisher

 

Volume

39

Number Of Pages

5

StartingPage

2385

EndingPage

2392

Date of Issue

2018-05

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.3892/or.2018.6288

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID