Researchers at the University of North Carolina (UNC) in
Chapel Hill have begun a
clinical trial
to investigate whether a
breast cancer “vaccine” could help treat certain patients with
advanced breast
cancer . The
vaccine, which is not a muscle injection (shot) but an intravenous
(through the vein) treatment, may be helpful to women whose cells
over-produce the
HER2 protein (also written as
HER2/neu).
HER2 is a protein found on cells that helps regulate cell
growth. For an unknown reason, 25% to 30% of breast cancer
patients have extra copies of the HER2 protein, which could result
in more aggressive tumors. Recently, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has approved the drug
Herceptin for use in breast cancer
patients who over-produce the HER2 protein. Now, researchers
are also developing a vaccine aimed at seeking out and destroying
cells carrying too much HER2.
“The vaccine has been developed initially to test whether we
can give the treatment safely to women with metastatic breast cancer
and to evaluate whether the treatment boosts the immune response
reactive with the tumor,” lead researcher Jonathan Serody, MD, PhD,
told Imaginis.com. “Additionally, we will watch to see if
individuals in the trial will have tumor regression after the
treatment.”
The vaccine is the first aimed at a specific part of the HER2
protein. Researchers have previously attempted to engineer
proteins to treat melanoma (a type of skin cancer) but not breast
cancer.
Researchers say the vaccine works by first increasing the
number of dendritic cells, white blood cells that warn the immune
system of potentially harmful cellular proteins. The dendritic
cells take fragments of the HER2 protein and rush back to the
lymph nodes to alert the killer T-cells
of the immune system. The killer T-cells then launch an attack
on the cells with an overabundance of the HER2 protein.
A
breast cancer patient from Rochester, New York received the first
vaccine infusion on July 6. The UNC researchers are still
enrolling patients for the clinical trial. Dr. Serody
anticipates that enrollment will continue for the next 18
months. Women interested in participating in the trial must
meet the following requirements:
- Patients must have Stage IV (metastatic) breast
cancer.
- Patients must have disease stability for one month.
- Patients must be off of chemotherapy (although previous
treatment with chemotherapy is acceptable).
In the trial, which is supported by the Breast Cancer
Research Foundation, patients will be randomly assigned to receive
either dendritic cells with the engineered HER2 fragment or a
fragment of a non-engineered (normal) protein. The treatment
involves three 30-minute infusions three weeks apart.
Dr. Serody and his colleagues hope the trial will determine
whether the vaccine can help shrink tumors in women with advanced
(Stage IV) breast cancer. Currently, the five-year survival
rate for Stage IV breast cancer is approximately 16%. If the
current trial and future trials prove successful, the vaccine could
eventually be used earlier as an alternative treatment for women at
risk of metastatic breast cancer (for example, before chemotherapy
is given).
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