Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10637/15298

Repurposing the yellow fever vaccine for intratumoral immunotherapy

Title: Repurposing the yellow fever vaccine for intratumoral immunotherapy
Authors : Aznar, María Ángela
Molina, Carmen
Teijeira, Álvaro
Rodríguez, Inmaculada
Azpilicueta, Arantza
Garasa, Saray
Sánchez Paulete, Alfonso R.
Cordeiro, Luna
Etxeberria, Iñaki
Álvarez, Maite
Rius Rocabert, Sergio
Nistal Villán, Estanislao
Berraondo, Pedro
Melero, Ignacio
Keywords: 17DCancer immunotherapyIntratumoral administrationVirotherapyYellow fever vaccine
Publisher: Wiley Open Access
Citation: Aznar, M. A., Molina, C., Teijeira, A., Rodriguez, I., Azpilikueta, A., Garasa, S., Sanchez-Paulete, A. R., Cordeiro, L., Etxeberria, I., Alvarez, M., Berraondo, P., Melero, I., Rius-Rocabert, S., & Nistal-Villan, E. (2020). Repurposing the yellow fever vaccine for intratumoral immunotherapy. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201910375
Abstract: Live 17D is widely used as a prophylactic vaccine strain for yellow fever virus that induces potent neutralizing humoral and cellular immunity against the wild-type pathogen. 17D replicates and kills mouse and human tumor cell lines but not non-transformed human cells. Intratumoral injections with viable 17D markedly delay transplanted tumor progression in a CD8 T-cell-dependent manner. In mice bearing bilateral tumors in which only one is intratumorally injected, contralateral therapeutic effects are observed consistent with more prominent CD8 T-cell infiltrates and a treatment-related reduction of Tregs. Additive efficacy effects were observed upon co-treatment with intratumoral 17D and systemic anti-CD137 and anti-PD-1 immunostimulatory monoclonal antibodies. Importantly, when mice were preimmunized with 17D, intratumoral 17D treatment achieved better local and distant antitumor immunity. Such beneficial effects of prevaccination are in part explained by the potentiation of CD4 and CD8 T-cell infiltration in the treated tumor. The repurposed use of a GMP-grade vaccine to be given via the intratumoral route in prevaccinated patients constitutes a clinically feasible and safe immunotherapy approach.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10637/15298
Rights : http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es
ISSN: 1757-4684
Issue Date: 2019
Center : Universidad San Pablo-CEU
Appears in Collections:Facultad de Farmacia





Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.