A multi-adjuvant personal neoantigen vaccine generates potent immunity in melanoma.
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Abstract | Personalized neoantigen-targeting vaccines have demonstrated great promise; however, improved immunogenicity is still needed. Since antigen availability and effective T cell priming are critical for maximal immunogenicity, we tested a synthetic long peptide vaccine formulated with Montanide, poly-ICLC, and locally administered ipilimumab in addition to systemic nivolumab in 10 patients with melanoma. These personalized vaccines generated de novo ex vivo T cell responses against the majority of immunizing neoepitopes in all 9 fully vaccinated patients and ex vivo CD8+ T cell responses in 6 of 9. Vaccination induced hundreds of circulating and intratumoral T cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes that were distinct from those arising after PD-1 inhibition. By linking the vaccine neoantigen specificity of T cell clonotypes with single-cell phenotypes in tumors, we demonstrate remodeling of the intratumoral T cell repertoire following vaccination. These observations show that multi-pronged immune adjuvanticity can boost T cell responses to neoantigen-targeting vaccines. |
Year of Publication | 2025
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Journal | Cell
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Date Published | 07/2025
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ISSN | 1097-4172
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DOI | 10.1016/j.cell.2025.06.019
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PubMed ID | 40645179
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