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ATIM-22. PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF PTEN LOSS IN NEWLY DIAGNOSED GBM PATIENTS TREATED WITH AUTOLOGOUS HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN VACCINE

Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION: The safety and efficacy of a heat shock protein peptide complex- 96 vaccine (HSPPC-96, Prophage) has been previously studied in phase II single-arm trials for the treatment of newly diagnosed and recurrent glioblastoma (GBM). These studies demonstrated modest improvements in survival compared with historical standards. PTEN loss has been recently associated with immunoresistance in GBM patients, mediated in part by B7-H1. PTEN status has not shown clear prognostic value in GBM patients treated with standard of care therapies. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prognostic significance of PTEN status in newly diagnosed GBM patients treated with autologous HSP vaccine and standard chemoradiation.

METHODS

Our institutional cohort of patients enrolled in a single arm, phase II study of adult GBM patients treated with autologous HSP vaccine and standard chemoradiation (n=27) was analyzed. Differences in overall survival (OS) by PTEN status were evaluated via Kaplan-Meier curves and Log-rank test.

RESULTS

Median overall survival (n=27) was 26 months. 23 patients had PTEN status available. PTEN loss was found in 16 patients (69.6%) whereas retained PTEN was present in 7 patients (30.4%). Median OS was 59 months (95% CI, 0–120 months) in patients with retained PTEN and 23 months (95% CI, 15–30 months) in patients with PTEN loss. The difference in OS was statistically significant (p=0.037). CONCLUSION: Retained PTEN expression was associated with extended survival in GBM patients treated with HSP vaccine. This finding suggests that PTEN loss may be associated with resistance to vaccine treatment and emphasizes the need for subgroup analysis in further immunotherapy studies.

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