癌症疫苗试验评价:免疫桥接和潜在的免疫终点。

IF 4.1 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY
Immunotherapy advances Pub Date : 2025-04-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/immadv/ltaf016
Ahmed Hussain, Benjamin Moxley-Wyles, Michael Bryan, Alex Gordon-Weeks, Ibrahem Al-Obaidi, Ciaran Sandhu, Lennard Lee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

治疗性癌症疫苗是一种新兴的免疫疗法,但在有效地使已批准的疫苗适应越来越多的佐剂、联合疗法和抗原选择方法方面仍然存在挑战。III期临床试验仍然是确定临床获益的金标准,但速度缓慢且资源密集,而放射学替代方法往往不能可靠地预测临床获益。在“免疫桥接试验”中使用有效的免疫替代物,可以提供一种可行的替代方案,以具有成本效益的方式安全地加速癌症疫苗的开发。虽然这种方法在传染病疫苗中已被证明是成功的,但在癌症疫苗中确定可靠的免疫保护相关因素已被证明是困难的。大多数临床试验提供了最丰富的数据来源,以建立相关性,但它们依赖于外周血样本和标准免疫测定,而这些检测无法捕捉疫苗诱导的抗肿瘤反应的复杂性。这篇综述首次概述了在免疫桥接试验背景下建立癌症疫苗免疫替代物的重要性和挑战,评估了当前的免疫测定方法,并强调了对能够表征肿瘤浸润淋巴细胞和抑制肿瘤微环境的技术的需求。作者建议适应替代发现的试验设计,包括结合I/II期试验和使用多组学方法。成功的免疫替代物开发可以使未来的免疫桥接试验加速已批准的癌症疫苗的优化,而无需进行新的三期试验,从而促进科学进步的更快临床实施,并使患者受益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cancer vaccine trial evaluations: immunobridging and potential immunological endpoints.

Therapeutic cancer vaccines are an emerging class of immunotherapy, but challenges remain in effectively adapting approved vaccines to a growing number of adjuvants, combination therapies, and antigen-selection methods. Phase III clinical trials remain the gold standard in determining clinical benefit, but are slow and resource intensive, whilst radiological surrogates often fail to reliably predict clinical benefit. Using immunological surrogates of efficacy, deployed in 'immunobridging trials', could present a viable alternative, safely speeding up cancer vaccine development in a cost-effective manner. Whilst this approach has proven successful in infectious disease vaccines, identifying reliable immunological correlates of protection has proven difficult for cancer vaccines. Most clinical trials, which present the richest source of data to establish a correlate, rely on peripheral blood samples and standard immunoassays that are ill-equipped to capture the complexity of the vaccine-induced anti-tumour response. This review is the first to outline the importance and challenges of establishing immunological surrogates for cancer vaccines in the context of immunobridging trials, evaluating current immunoassay methods, and highlighting the need for techniques that can characterize tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes and the suppressive tumour microenvironment across a range of patients. The authors propose adapting trial designs for surrogate discovery, including combining phase I/II trials and the use of multi-omics approaches. Successful immunological surrogate development could enable future immunobridging trials to accelerate the optimization of approved cancer vaccines without requiring new phase III trials, promoting faster clinical implementation of scientific advances and patient benefits.

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CiteScore
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