LH Butterfield, A Ribas, WS Meng, VB Dissette, S Amarnani, HT Vu, E Seja, K Todd, JA Glaspy, WH McBride, JS Economou. (2003). " T-cell responses to HLA-A*0201 immunodominant peptides derived from alpha-fetoprotein in patients with hepatocellular cancer. " Clin Cancer Res. 9, 5902-8. PMID: 14676113
PURPOSE: An existing immunological paradigm is that high concentrations of soluble protein contribute to the maintenance of peripheral tolerance/ignorance to self protein. We tested this hypothesis in a clinical immunotherapy trial using class I-restricted peptide epitopes derived from alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). AFP is a self protein expressed by fetal liver at high levels, but transcriptionally repressed at birth. AFP is de-repressed in a majority of hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) and patients with active disease can have plasma levels in the mg/ml range. We previously identified four immunodominant HLA-A*0201-restricted peptides derived from human AFP that could stimulate specific T-cell responses in normal volunteer peripheral blood lymphocytes cultures. We wished to test the hypothesis that AFP peptide-reactive T cells could be expanded in vivo in HCC patients immunized with these four AFP peptides. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We undertook a pilot Phase I clinical trial in which HLA-A*0201 patients with AFP-positive HCC were immunized with three biweekly intradermal vaccinations of the four AFP peptides (100 microg or 500 microg each) emulsified in incomplete Freund's adjuvant. RESULTS: All of the patients (n=6) generated T-cell responses to most or all of the peptides as measured by direct IFNgamma enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) and MHC class I tetramer assays. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the human T-cell repertoire is capable of recognizing AFP in the context of MHC class I even in an environment of high circulating levels of this oncofetal protein.