Long-term complete remission following radiosurgery and immunotherapy in a melanoma patient with brain metastasis: immunologic correlates

PMID: 24795353
Journal: Cancer immunology research (volume: 2, issue: 5, Cancer Immunol Res 2014 May;2(5):404-9)
Published: 2014-02-05

Authors:
Karbach J, Gnjatic S, Biskamp M, Atmaca A, Weidmann E, Brandt K, Wahle C, Bernhard H, Knuth A, Jäger E

ABSTRACT

A melanoma patient with brain metastases was treated by gamma-knife radiosurgery and immunotherapy with autologous tumor-lysate-loaded dendritic cells (DC). Ten years after the combined treatment, the patient remains in complete remission. Remarkable immunologic correlates to the clinical development were the transient induction of NY-ESO-1 antibody and the durable expansion of MAGE-A1p161-169 EADPTGHSY-specific CD8+ T cells. Although the induction of NY-ESO-1 antibody most likely resulted from gamma-knife-mediated „auto-vaccination,“ the persistence of circulating MAGE-A1-specific T cells, which are still detectable ex vivo in the absence of any tumor manifestation, coincides with DC-based vaccination administered monthly until today.