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ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy

Immunotherapies for cancer are transforming patient care, but clinical responses vary considerably from patient to patient. Simple, inexpensive strategies to target treatment to likely responders could substantially improve efficacy while simultaneously reducing health care costs, but identification...

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Autores principales: Muthana, Saddam M., Gulley, James L., Hodge, James W., Schlom, Jeffrey, Gildersleeve, Jeffrey C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741674/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26338967
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author Muthana, Saddam M.
Gulley, James L.
Hodge, James W.
Schlom, Jeffrey
Gildersleeve, Jeffrey C.
author_facet Muthana, Saddam M.
Gulley, James L.
Hodge, James W.
Schlom, Jeffrey
Gildersleeve, Jeffrey C.
author_sort Muthana, Saddam M.
collection PubMed
description Immunotherapies for cancer are transforming patient care, but clinical responses vary considerably from patient to patient. Simple, inexpensive strategies to target treatment to likely responders could substantially improve efficacy while simultaneously reducing health care costs, but identification of reliable biomarkers has proven challenging. Previously, we found that pre-treatment serum IgM to blood group A (BG-A) correlated with survival for patients treated with PROSTVAC-VF, a therapeutic cancer vaccine in phase III clinical trials for the treatment of prostate cancer. These results suggested that ABO blood type might influence efficacy. Unfortunately, blood types were not available in the clinical records for all but 8 patients and insufficient amounts of sera were left for standard blood typing methods. To test the hypothesis, therefore, we developed a new glycan microarray-based method for determining ABO blood type. The method requires only 4 μL of serum, provides 97% accuracy, and allows simultaneous profiling of many other serum anti-glycan antibodies. After validation with 220 healthy subjects of known blood type, the method was then applied to 74 PROSTVAC-VF patients and 37 control patients from a phase II trial. In this retrospective study, we found that type B and O PROSTVAC-VF patients demonstrated markedly improved clinical outcomes relative to A and AB patients, including longer median survival, longer median survival relative to Halabi predicted survival, and improved overall survival via Kaplan-Meier survival analysis (p = 0.006). Consequently, blood type may provide an inexpensive screen to pre-select patients likely to benefit from PROSTVAC-VF therapy.
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spelling pubmed-47416742016-03-03 ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy Muthana, Saddam M. Gulley, James L. Hodge, James W. Schlom, Jeffrey Gildersleeve, Jeffrey C. Oncotarget Clinical Research Paper Immunotherapies for cancer are transforming patient care, but clinical responses vary considerably from patient to patient. Simple, inexpensive strategies to target treatment to likely responders could substantially improve efficacy while simultaneously reducing health care costs, but identification of reliable biomarkers has proven challenging. Previously, we found that pre-treatment serum IgM to blood group A (BG-A) correlated with survival for patients treated with PROSTVAC-VF, a therapeutic cancer vaccine in phase III clinical trials for the treatment of prostate cancer. These results suggested that ABO blood type might influence efficacy. Unfortunately, blood types were not available in the clinical records for all but 8 patients and insufficient amounts of sera were left for standard blood typing methods. To test the hypothesis, therefore, we developed a new glycan microarray-based method for determining ABO blood type. The method requires only 4 μL of serum, provides 97% accuracy, and allows simultaneous profiling of many other serum anti-glycan antibodies. After validation with 220 healthy subjects of known blood type, the method was then applied to 74 PROSTVAC-VF patients and 37 control patients from a phase II trial. In this retrospective study, we found that type B and O PROSTVAC-VF patients demonstrated markedly improved clinical outcomes relative to A and AB patients, including longer median survival, longer median survival relative to Halabi predicted survival, and improved overall survival via Kaplan-Meier survival analysis (p = 0.006). Consequently, blood type may provide an inexpensive screen to pre-select patients likely to benefit from PROSTVAC-VF therapy. Impact Journals LLC 2015-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4741674/ /pubmed/26338967 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Muthana et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Clinical Research Paper
Muthana, Saddam M.
Gulley, James L.
Hodge, James W.
Schlom, Jeffrey
Gildersleeve, Jeffrey C.
ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title_full ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title_fullStr ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title_full_unstemmed ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title_short ABO blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
title_sort abo blood type correlates with survival on prostate cancer vaccine therapy
topic Clinical Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741674/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26338967
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