2022
The feasibility of using an autologous GM-CSF-secreting breast cancer vaccine to induce immunity in patients with stage II–III and metastatic breast cancers
Anderson KS, Erick TK, Chen M, Daley H, Campbell M, Colson Y, Mihm M, Zakka LR, Hopper M, Barry W, Winer EP, Dranoff G, Overmoyer B. The feasibility of using an autologous GM-CSF-secreting breast cancer vaccine to induce immunity in patients with stage II–III and metastatic breast cancers. Breast Cancer Research And Treatment 2022, 194: 65-78. PMID: 35482127, PMCID: PMC9046531, DOI: 10.1007/s10549-022-06562-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBreast cancer vaccinesAutologous GM-CSFBreast cancerMetastatic diseaseGM-CSFStage IICancer vaccinesTumor cellsEvidence of diseaseStart of vaccinationInjection site reactionsMetastatic breast cancerUpper respiratory symptomsImmune cell infiltrationRole of vaccinationReplication-defective adenoviral vectorEvaluable patientsMethodsTumor cellsStable diseaseWeekly vaccinationsJoint painProgressive diseaseRespiratory symptomsFifth injectionTRIAL REGISTRATION
2009
A phase I study of an autologous GM-CSF-secreting breast cancer vaccine.
Anderson K, Hodi F, Sasada T, Canning C, Hassett M, Mayer E, Hannagan K, Wong J, Colson Y, Shoji B, Najita J, Sibani S, LaBaer J, Winer E, Dranoff G. A phase I study of an autologous GM-CSF-secreting breast cancer vaccine. Cancer Research 2009, 69: 4124. DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.sabcs-4124.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBreast cancer vaccinesGM-CSFAutologous GM-CSFCancer vaccinesLung cancerSkin biopsiesImmune responseECOG performance status 0Antigen-specific immune responsesLocal injection site reactionsPerformance status 0Anti-tumor immunityInjection site reactionsMetastatic breast cancerMalignant pleural effusionReplication-defective adenoviral vectorMultiple tumor modelsGM-CSF secretionBreast cancer cellsTumor cell yieldGranulocyte-macrophage colonyAutologous vaccinationMeasurable diseasePrior chemotherapyStable disease