Cancer Regression in Patients After Transfer of Genetically Engineered Lymphocytes

Richard A. Morgan(National Cancer Institute), Mark E. Dudley(National Cancer Institute), John R. Wunderlich(National Cancer Institute), Marybeth S. Hughes(National Cancer Institute), James Chih‐Hsin Yang(National Cancer Institute), Richard M. Sherry(National Cancer Institute), Richard E. Royal(National Cancer Institute), Suzanne L. Topalian(National Cancer Institute), Udai S. Kammula(National Cancer Institute), Nicholas P. Restifo(National Cancer Institute), Zhili Zheng(National Cancer Institute), Azam Nahvi(National Cancer Institute), Christiaan R. de Vries(National Cancer Institute), Linda Rogers-Freezer(National Cancer Institute), Sharon Mavroukakis(National Cancer Institute), Steven A. Rosenberg(National Cancer Institute)
Science
August 31, 2006
Cited by 2,572Open Access
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Abstract

Through the adoptive transfer of lymphocytes after host immunodepletion, it is possible to mediate objective cancer regression in human patients with metastatic melanoma. However, the generation of tumor-specific T cells in this mode of immunotherapy is often limiting. Here we report the ability to specifically confer tumor recognition by autologous lymphocytes from peripheral blood by using a retrovirus that encodes a T cell receptor. Adoptive transfer of these transduced cells in 15 patients resulted in durable engraftment at levels exceeding 10% of peripheral blood lymphocytes for at least 2 months after the infusion. We observed high sustained levels of circulating, engineered cells at 1 year after infusion in two patients who both demonstrated objective regression of metastatic melanoma lesions. This study suggests the therapeutic potential of genetically engineered cells for the biologic therapy of cancer.


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