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Lymph node vaccine triggers immune response in 67% of KRAS cancer patients

6 February 2026

—

News

Marcus Lee

A lymph-node-targeting vaccine activated immune responses in 67% of patients with KRAS-mutated pancreatic and colorectal cancers during UCLA Health's phase 1 AMPLIFY 201 trial, priming T-cells to recognize tumor mutations beyond the intended KRAS target. The trial addresses a decades-old gap: KRAS mutations have been "undruggable" outside the rare G12C subtype, leaving most patients without targeted options.

KRAS mutations drive roughly one-quarter of all human cancers; in the United States, they appear in 85–90% of pancreatic cancers and 35–40% of colorectal cancers, yet few targeted therapies exist. The mutations lock growth-regulating proteins into an "on" position. Tumors expand unchecked. Chemotherapy and immunotherapy often fail after first-line treatment.

Researchers at UCLA Health's Jonsson Cancer Center delivered vaccine doses directly into lymph nodes—tissues where immune cells gather and learn to identify threats—then tracked blood samples for T-cell activity against KRAS and other tumor-associated mutations. Patients generated responses not only to KRAS but also to additional cancer signatures, demonstrating that the vaccine primed the immune system to recognize a wider mutation array. All doses were tolerated without serious adverse events.

However, the data confirm the vaccine triggers measurable immune responses; they do not yet demonstrate tumor shrinkage, survival extension, or symptom relief. Phase 1 trials assess safety and biological activity in small patient groups. Larger phase 2 and phase 3 trials are required to establish clinical benefit.

The research team will expand enrollment to measure whether immune activity translates into patient outcomes over the next several years, determining whether this approach earns regulatory consideration. Patients interested in trial participation can consult oncologists about eligibility for future AMPLIFY phases.

What is this about?

  • News
  • Marcus Lee
  • Health
  • Biotech
  • pharmaceutical AI
  • biomedical innovation
  • cancer vaccines
  • KRAS mutations
  • lymph node immunotherapy
  • phase 1 oncology trials

Feed

    ..

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Lymph node vaccine triggers immune response in 67% of KRAS cancer patients

6 February 2026

—

News

Marcus Lee

A lymph-node-targeting vaccine activated immune responses in 67% of patients with KRAS-mutated pancreatic and colorectal cancers during UCLA Health's phase 1 AMPLIFY 201 trial, priming T-cells to recognize tumor mutations beyond the intended KRAS target. The trial addresses a decades-old gap: KRAS mutations have been "undruggable" outside the rare G12C subtype, leaving most patients without targeted options.

KRAS mutations drive roughly one-quarter of all human cancers; in the United States, they appear in 85–90% of pancreatic cancers and 35–40% of colorectal cancers, yet few targeted therapies exist. The mutations lock growth-regulating proteins into an "on" position. Tumors expand unchecked. Chemotherapy and immunotherapy often fail after first-line treatment.

Researchers at UCLA Health's Jonsson Cancer Center delivered vaccine doses directly into lymph nodes—tissues where immune cells gather and learn to identify threats—then tracked blood samples for T-cell activity against KRAS and other tumor-associated mutations. Patients generated responses not only to KRAS but also to additional cancer signatures, demonstrating that the vaccine primed the immune system to recognize a wider mutation array. All doses were tolerated without serious adverse events.

However, the data confirm the vaccine triggers measurable immune responses; they do not yet demonstrate tumor shrinkage, survival extension, or symptom relief. Phase 1 trials assess safety and biological activity in small patient groups. Larger phase 2 and phase 3 trials are required to establish clinical benefit.

The research team will expand enrollment to measure whether immune activity translates into patient outcomes over the next several years, determining whether this approach earns regulatory consideration. Patients interested in trial participation can consult oncologists about eligibility for future AMPLIFY phases.

What is this about?

  • News/
  • Marcus Lee/
  • Health/
  • Biotech/
  • pharmaceutical AI/
  • biomedical innovation/
  • cancer vaccines/
  • KRAS mutations/
  • lymph node immunotherapy/
  • phase 1 oncology trials

Feed

    ..

    ..

    ..

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    A potential hardware redesign with 8 sensors aims to move from simple alerts to direct cardiovascular measurement

    Ben Ramos4 days ago

    Your earbuds could become a secure digital key via your heartbeat

    AccLock uses standard accelerometers to verify identity without needing premium optical heart trackers

    Ben Ramos5 days ago
    Memory chip shortages could end by 2027

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    Aggressive Chinese production expansions from YMTC and CXMT may lower hardware costs sooner than the 2030 consensus

    Ben Ramos5 days ago
    Hisense Explorer X1 Pro brings 120-inch cinema to your living room

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    Onyx Boox Poke 7 series brings paper-like clarity to your library

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    New 300 ppi displays and 2 TB expandable storage offer a sharper, larger reading experience

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    SpaceX IPO: A historic bet on the space economy

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    With 2025 revenue hitting $18.6 billion, the Nasdaq debut tests market appetite for Elon Musk

    Jasmine Wu5 days ago
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