Lynch syndrome cancer vaccines: A roadmap for the development of precision immunoprevention strategies

Front Oncol. 2023 Mar 22:13:1147590. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1147590. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Hereditary cancer syndromes (HCS) account for 5~10% of all cancer diagnosis. Lynch syndrome (LS) is one of the most common HCS, caused by germline mutations in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes. Even with prospective cancer surveillance, LS is associated with up to 50% lifetime risk of colorectal, endometrial, and other cancers. While significant progress has been made in the timely identification of germline pathogenic variant carriers and monitoring and early detection of precancerous lesions, cancer-risk reduction strategies are still centered around endoscopic or surgical removal of neoplastic lesions and susceptible organs. Safe and effective cancer prevention strategies are critically needed to improve the life quality and longevity of LS and other HCS carriers. The era of precision oncology driven by recent technological advances in tumor molecular profiling and a better understanding of genetic risk factors has transformed cancer prevention approaches for at-risk individuals, including LS carriers. MMR deficiency leads to the accumulation of insertion and deletion mutations in microsatellites (MS), which are particularly prone to DNA polymerase slippage during DNA replication. Mutations in coding MS give rise to frameshift peptides (FSP) that are recognized by the immune system as neoantigens. Due to clonal evolution, LS tumors share a set of recurrent and predictable FSP neoantigens in the same and in different LS patients. Cancer vaccines composed of commonly recurring FSP neoantigens selected through prediction algorithms have been clinically evaluated in LS carriers and proven safe and immunogenic. Preclinically analogous FSP vaccines have been shown to elicit FSP-directed immune responses and exert tumor-preventive efficacy in murine models of LS. While the immunopreventive efficacy of "off-the-shelf" vaccines consisting of commonly recurring FSP antigens is currently investigated in LS clinical trials, the feasibility and utility of personalized FSP vaccines with individual HLA-restricted epitopes are being explored for more precise targeting. Here, we discuss recent advances in precision cancer immunoprevention approaches, emerging enabling technologies, research gaps, and implementation barriers toward clinical translation of risk-tailored prevention strategies for LS carriers. We will also discuss the feasibility and practicality of next-generation cancer vaccines that are based on personalized immunogenic epitopes for precision cancer immunoprevention.

Keywords: DNA mismatch repair deficiency; cancer vaccines; frameshift mutations; immunoprevention; lynch syndrome; microsatellite instability; precision cancer prevention; tumor neoantigens.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by NIH grants U54 CA 272688 (DK, JG, MKD, SL, MK), U01 CA233056 (JG, MKD, SL, MK), and R01 HL157174 (DK), grants from German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe, 70113455, 70113890), German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, GE 592-9/1), and Donations against Cancer, NCT Heidelberg, and contracts from NCI PREVENT program (HHSN2612015000391).