Past

Checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) and BRAF/MEK inhibitor therapies have provided new options for patients with advanced melanoma and have also been applied to the adjuvant setting. Unfortunately, not all patients respond to CPIs and their use is often limited by adverse events. Similarly, the responses to BRAF/MEK inhibitors are typically short-lived due to tumor evolution.1 Personalized cancer vaccination offers a unique approach to activate an individual’s own immune system and to generate a tumor-specific response, including against unique neoantigens specific to the individual’s tumor. However, clinical results with cancer vaccines in general, have been disappointing, with most trials conducted in the metastatic setting.2 Conversely, our study investigates the role of vaccination as adjuvant therapy for resected, advanced-stage melanoma.

Present

Our randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, phase IIb trial investigated tumor lysate, particle-loaded, dendritic cell (TLPLDC) vaccine administration to prevent recurrence in patients with resected stage III/IV melanoma after completion of other standard-of-care (SoC) therapies.3 Co-primary endpoints were prespecified as intention-to-treat (ITT) 2-year disease-free survival (DFS) and per-treatment (PT) 2-year DFS, with the PT group defined as patients who completed the primary vaccine series (PVS). The PT group was included in the primary analysis as the active specific immunity generated by vaccination takes time to demonstrate its clinical effect, similar to trends observed with pembrolizumab,4 and patients with early recurrence did not receive the full treatment course. A total of 144 patients were enrolled, with 103 patients in the vaccine group and 41 in the control group. Notably, the SoC within this group of patients changed significantly during the conduct of our trial, and our protocol was amended to allow concurrent CPI therapy. The TLPLDC vaccine was demonstrated to be safe, with no difference in the rates of total adverse events between groups (35.9% vaccine vs. 31.7% control; p = 0.632). No statistical difference was found in the ITT 2-year DFS (38.5% vs. 27.0%; p = 0.974), but, according to PT analysis, 2-year DFS improved in the vaccinated patients (62.9% vs. 34.8%; p = 0.041).

Future

Our analysis demonstrated that the TLPLDC vaccine is safe and well-tolerated and demonstrated statistically significant efficacy as adjuvant therapy for patients who completed the PVS. Meanwhile, indications for CPI have expanded into adjuvant treatment for stage III disease, but many patients do not respond to this therapy or cannot tolerate it. There is increasing evidence for a synergistic effect between CPIs and cancer vaccination, with a vaccine causing an initial T-cell infiltration into tumor, and CPI activating and protecting those T cells to lead to a more meaningful antitumor response.5 Our planned phase III trial will evaluate the efficacy of the TLPLDC vaccine plus CPI versus CPI alone in clinically disease-free patients with high-risk stage III/IV melanoma, and will better elucidate if this synergy translates to a clinical benefit.