The work that culminated in Brigham’s vaccine grew out of research into a subset of pancreatic cancer survivors known as exceptional responders
—the small percentage of people who make it to the five-year mark after a diagnosis.
“These patients, you know, they’re very rare,”
Balachandran says.
Even at a facility as large as Memorial Sloan Kettering,
which sees tens of thousands of cancer patients a year,
it was possible to study this group with any precision only because of the hospital’s long-standing mandate to save samples of every patient’s tissue.
When Balachandran joined the faculty in 2015, his research on long-term survivors relied on tissue samples taken more than a decade earlier.
In 2017 Balachandran and his collaborators published a study demonstrating that some patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma had more cells able to recognize the unique proteins that mutant tumor cells produced
and that their immune systems seemed to develop a kind of long-term memory to fight recurrence.
In some cases, immune cells with receptors that could bind to these cancer proteins persisted in the blood for more than a decade after the tumors that spawned them were removed.
What if, Balachandran wondered, we could equip the 92 percent of patients who are not naturally exceptional responders with the same kinds of biological tools?
“If you can teach the immune system to recognize the proteins in, say, pancreatic cancer, perhaps that could provide a blueprint,” he says.
As tumors grow and metastasize, they undergo a kind of compressed evolution
in which normal cells with the host’s DNA accrue mutations that cause them to divide and multiply abnormally,
forming an ever larger group of closely related tumor clones.
Many mutations register in the form of abnormal proteins and protein fragments,
called #neoantigens,
some of which accumulate on the surface of the proliferating tumor cells.
Balachandran compared this growing family tree of tumor clones with new variants in a group of viruses,
like the Alpha, Delta and Omicron variants of SARS-CoV-2,
which emerged as the COVID-19 pandemic wore on.
“You’d want a COVID vaccine to be able to target each different virus in that rapidly evolving clade,” Balachandran says.
For the development of a cancer vaccine, mapping the evolutionary trajectory of a cancerous tumor is equally important,
albeit with a different set of parameters.
The goal is not to distinguish between the presentations of two related pathogens
but rather to understand at what point a disease derived from one’s own body starts to register to the immune system as not self.
“At some point
—we don’t think immediately
—the immune system starts to notice,”
says Benjamin Greenbaum, Balachandran’s colleague at Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Olayan Center for Cancer Vaccines,
who led the computational work behind the vaccine given to Brigham.
In later stages, tumors typically accumulate signs of immune system involvement even if the immune response hasn’t been effective
—changes in the cell makeup of the microenvironment around the tumor,
the display of checkpoint molecules.
These signs can be understood as evolutionary adaptations on the part of the tumor in the race to evade detection,
Greenbaum explains.
“So then the question really became,
Can we try to estimate what the immune system is really seeing in cancer?”
#checkpointinhibitors
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