6533b852fe1ef96bd12ab89b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Translation of genomics-guided RNA-based personalised cancer vaccines: towards the bedside
Cedrik M. BrittenF MuellerValesca BoisguerinJohn C. CastleMartin LoewerSebastian KreiterUgur SahinÖZlem TüreciJan Diekmannsubject
Cancer ResearchMutationbusiness.industryGenetic enhancementDrug Evaluation PreclinicalCancerGenomicsmedicine.diseasePrecision medicinemedicine.disease_causeBioinformaticsCancer VaccinesTranslational Research BiomedicalBreast cancerOncologyImmunologyMutationMedicineHumansPersonalized medicineCancer vaccineMinireviewRNA NeoplasmPrecision Medicinebusinessdescription
Cancer is a disease caused by DNA mutations. Cancer therapies targeting defined functional mutations have shown clinical benefit. However, as 95% of the mutations in a tumour are unique to that single patient and only a small number of mutations are shared between patients, the addressed medical need is modest. A rapidly determined patient-specific tumour mutation pattern combined with a flexible mutation-targeting drug platform could generate a mutation-targeting individualised therapy, which would benefit each single patient. Next-generation sequencing enables the rapid identification of somatic mutations in individual tumours (the mutanome). Immunoinformatics enables predictions of mutation immunogenicity. Mutation-targeting RNA-based vaccines can be rapidly and affordably synthesised as custom GMP drug products. Integration of these cutting-edge technologies into a clinically applicable process holds the promise of a disruptive innovation benefiting cancer patients. Here, we describe our translation of the individualised RNA-based cancer vaccine concept into clinic trials.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-10-01 | British Journal of Cancer |