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      A multiantigen vaccine targeting neu, IGFBP-2, and IGF-IR prevents tumor progression in mice with preinvasive breast disease.

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          Abstract

          A multiantigen multipeptide vaccine, targeting proteins expressed in preinvasive breast lesions, can stimulate type I CD4(+) T cells which have been shown to be deficient in both patients with breast cancer and mice that develop mammary tumors. Transgenic mice (TgMMTV-neu) were immunized with a multiantigen peptide vaccine specific for neu, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 2 and insulin-like growth factor receptor-I at a time when some of the animals already had preinvasive lesions (18 weeks of age). Although immunization with each individual antigen was partially effective in inhibiting tumor growth, immunization with the multiantigen vaccine was highly effective, blocking development of palpable lesions in 65% of mice and slowing tumor growth in the infrequent palpable tumors, which did arise. Protection was mediated by CD4(+) T cells, and the few slow-growing tumors that did develop demonstrated a significant increase in intratumoral CD8(+) T cells as compared with controls (P = 0.0007). We also combined the vaccine with agents that were, by themselves, partially effective inhibitors of tumor progression in this model; lapatinib and the RXR agonist bexarotene. Although the combination of lapatinib and vaccination performed similarly to vaccination alone (P = 0.735), bexarotene and vaccination significantly enhanced disease-free survival (P < 0.0001), and approximately 90% of the mice showed no pathologic evidence of carcinomas at one year. The vaccine also demonstrated significant clinical efficacy in an additional transgenic model of breast cancer (TgC3(I)-Tag). Chemoimmunoprevention combinations may be an effective approach to breast cancer prevention even when the vaccine is administered in the presence of subclinical disease.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cancer Prev Res (Phila)
          Cancer prevention research (Philadelphia, Pa.)
          American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
          1940-6215
          1940-6215
          Dec 2013
          : 6
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Tumor Vaccine Group, Center for Translational Medicine in Women's Health, 850 Republican Street, Box 358050, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98109. ndisis@uw.edu.
          Article
          1940-6207.CAPR-13-0182 NIHMS534897
          10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-13-0182
          3864759
          24154719
          d73dea8d-0ec0-49bf-a795-990dd887d813
          History

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