Interdisciplinary critique of sipuleucel-T as immunotherapy in castration-resistant prostate cancer

Marie L Huber, Laura Haynes, Chris Parker, Peter Iversen

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    129 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Sipuleucel-T was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration on April 29, 2010, as an immunotherapy for late-stage prostate cancer. To manufacture sipuleucel-T, mononuclear cells harvested from the patient are incubated with a recombinant prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) antigen and reinfused. The manufacturer proposes that antigen-presenting cells exogenously activated by PAP induce endogenous T-cells to attack PAP-bearing prostate cancer cells. However, the lack of demonstrable tumor responses has prompted calls for scrutiny of the design of the trials in which sipuleucel-T demonstrated a 4-month survival benefit. Previously unpublished data from the sipuleucel-T trials show worse overall survival in older vs younger patients in the placebo groups, which have not been shown previously to be prognostic for survival in castration-resistant prostate cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. Because two-thirds of the cells harvested from placebo patients, but not from the sipuleucel-T arm, were frozen and not reinfused, a detrimental effect of this large repeated cell loss provides a potential alternative explanation for the survival "benefit." Patient safety depends on adequately addressing this alternative explanation for the trial results.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalNational Cancer Institute. Journal (Print)
    Volume104
    Issue number4
    Pages (from-to)273-9
    Number of pages7
    ISSN0027-8874
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

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