TroVax
TroVax is a cancer vaccine being developed by Oxford BioMedica. No cancer vaccines have been proven to cure cancer or extend life yet,[1] TroVax has been studied in a number of trials for colon cancer.[2]
TroVax uses a tumor-associated antigen, 5T4, with a pox virus vector. 5T4 is found in a wide range of solid cancers and its presence is correlated with poor prognosis.
Research
All solid tumors where the 5T4 tumor antigen is present. Clinical development is ongoing in renal cell carcinoma, colorectal cancer, lung cancer, and prostate cancer, and is planned in breast cancer.
Technical design
TroVax is a proprietary tumor-associated antigen, 5T4, delivered by the pox virus vector, modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA).
Renal cell carcinoma
Trovax is administered in combinations with interleukin-2, interferon-alpha, sunitinib to combat advanced or metastatic renal cell carcinoma to 700 patients, with the primary endpoint being the rate of overall survival. There is a Special Protocol Assessment agreement with the FDA that specifies the design, conduct, analysis and endpoints of the trial.[3]
Commercialisation strategy
Oxford BioMedica entered a global development and commercialisation agreement for TroVax in March 2007 with sanofi-aventis. There are many aspects to this agreement including co-funding the ongoing TRIST study and funding all other research, development, regulatory and commercialisation activities.[4]
See also
References
- ↑ National Cancer Institute, Cancer Vaccine Fact Sheet, Updated: 06/08/2006
- ↑ Rowe, J; Cen, P (2014). "TroVax in colorectal cancer.". Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics. 10 (11): 3196–200. PMID 25483641.
- ↑ Amato, Robert; Robert E. Hawkins; Howard L. Kaufman; John A. Thompson; Piotr Tomczak; Cezary Szczylik; Mike McDonald; Sarah Eastty; William H. Shingler; Jackie de Belin; Madusha Goonewardena; Stuart Naylor; Richard Harrop (15 November 2010). "Vaccination of Metastatic Renal Cancer Patients with MVA-5T4: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase III Study". Clinical Cancer Research. 16 (22): 5539–47. PMID 20881001. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-10-2082.
- ↑ Oxford Biomedica, 11/09/2007