Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that vaccines which enhance tumour antigen recognition may provide clinical benefit to subsets of non-small cell lung cancer patients. In this review, a variety of peptide-, gene- and cell-based clinical vaccine approaches targeting non-small cell lung cancer patients are reviewed. Results consistently demonstrate lack of toxicity. Examples of prolonged stable disease, tumour shrinkage response and survival benefit in comparison with historical and low-dose control groups have been demonstrated. Specific vaccines fulfilling justification for Phase III evaluation based on these results include LBLP25, TGF-β2 antisense gene vaccine and GVAX.