Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Teodora Kaltcheva is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Teodora Kaltcheva.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Clinical Evaluation of Safety and Immunogenicity of PADRE-Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Tetanus-CMV Fusion Peptide Vaccines With or Without PF03512676 Adjuvant

Corinna La Rosa; Jeff Longmate; Simon F. Lacey; Teodora Kaltcheva; Rahul Sharan; Denise Marsano; Peter Kwon; Jennifer Drake; Brenda Williams; Sharon Denison; Suenell Broyer; Larry A. Couture; Ryotaro Nakamura; Morris I. Kelsey; Arthur M. Krieg; Don J. Diamond; John A. Zaia

BACKGROUND It has been reported that cytomegalovirus (CMV) pp65-specific T cells can protect hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients from CMV complications. Two candidate CMV peptide vaccines composed of the HLA A*0201 pp65(495-503) cytotoxic CD8(+) T-cell epitope fused to 2 different universal T-helper epitopes (either the synthetic Pan DR epitope [PADRE] or a natural Tetanus sequence) were clinically evaluated for safety and ability to elicit pp65 T cells in HLA A*0201 healthy volunteers. METHODS Escalating doses (0.5, 2.5, 10 mg) of PADRE or Tetanus pp65(495-503) vaccines with (30 adults) or without (28 adults) PF03512676 adjuvant were administered by subcutaneous injection every 3 weeks for a total of 4 injections. RESULTS No serious adverse events were reported, although vaccines used in combination with PF03512676 had enhanced reactogenicity. Ex vivo responses were detected by flow cytometry exclusively in volunteers who received the vaccine coadministered with PF03512676. In addition, using a sensitive in vitro stimulation system, vaccine-elicited pp65(495-503) T cells were expanded in 30% of volunteers injected solely with the CMV peptides and in all tested subjects receiving the vaccines coinjected with PF03512676. CONCLUSIONS Acceptable safety profiles and vaccine-driven expansion of pp65(495-503) T cells in healthy adults support further evaluation of CMV peptide vaccines combined with PF03512676 in the HCT setting. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION NCT00722839.


Cancer Research | 2011

Enhancement of Cancer Vaccine Therapy by Systemic Delivery of a Tumor-Targeting Salmonella-Based STAT3 shRNA Suppresses the Growth of Established Melanoma Tumors

Edwin R. Manuel; Céline A. Blache; Rebecca Paquette; Teodora Kaltcheva; Hidenobu Ishizaki; Joshua D. I. Ellenhorn; Michael Hensel; Leonid S. Metelitsa; Don J. Diamond

Cancer vaccine therapies have only achieved limited success when focusing on effector immunity with the goal of eliciting robust tumor-specific T-cell responses. More recently, there is an emerging understanding that effective immunity can only be achieved by coordinate disruption of tumor-derived immunosuppression. Toward that goal, we have developed a potent Salmonella-based vaccine expressing codon-optimized survivin (CO-SVN), referred to as 3342Max. When used alone as a therapeutic vaccine, 3342Max can attenuate growth of aggressive murine melanomas overexpressing SVN. However, under more immunosuppressive conditions, such as those associated with larger tumor volumes, we found that the vaccine was ineffective. Vaccine efficacy could be rescued if tumor-bearing mice were treated initially with Salmonella encoding a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) targeting the tolerogenic molecule STAT3 (YS1646-shSTAT3). In vaccinated mice, silencing STAT3 increased the proliferation and granzyme B levels of intratumoral CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. The combined strategy also increased apoptosis in tumors of treated mice, enhancing tumor-specific killing of tumor targets. Interestingly, mice treated with YS1646-shSTAT3 or 3342Max alone were similarly unsuccessful in rejecting established tumors, whereas the combined regimen was highly potent. Our findings establish that a combined strategy of silencing immunosuppressive molecules followed by vaccination can act synergistically to attenuate tumor growth, and they offer a novel translational direction to improve tumor immunotherapy.


Cancer Research | 2012

Systemic Delivery of Salmonella typhimurium Transformed with IDO shRNA Enhances Intratumoral Vector Colonization and Suppresses Tumor Growth

Céline A. Blache; Edwin R. Manuel; Teodora Kaltcheva; Andrea N. Wong; Joshua D. I. Ellenhorn; Bruce R. Blazar; Don J. Diamond

Generating antitumor responses through the inhibition of tumor-derived immune suppression represents a promising strategy in the development of cancer immunotherapeutics. Here, we present a strategy incorporating delivery of the bacterium Salmonella typhimurium (ST), naturally tropic for the hypoxic tumor environment, transformed with a small hairpin RNA (shRNA) plasmid against the immunosuppressive molecule indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (shIDO). When systemically delivered into mice, shIDO silences host IDO expression and leads to massive intratumoral cell death that is associated with significant tumor infiltration by polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN). shIDO-ST treatment causes tumor cell death independently of host IDO and adaptive immunity, which may have important implications for use in immunosuppressed patients with cancer. Furthermore, shIDO-ST treatment increases reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by infiltrating PMNs and, conversely, PMN immunodepletion abrogates tumor control. Silencing of host IDO significantly enhances S. typhimurium colonization, suggesting that IDO expression within the tumor controls the immune response to S. typhimurium. In summary, we present a novel approach to cancer treatment that involves the specific silencing of tumor-derived IDO that allows for the recruitment of ROS-producing PMNs, which may act primarily to clear S. typhimurium infection, but in the process also induces apoptosis of surrounding tumor tissue resulting in a vigorous antitumor effect.


Blood | 2017

MVA vaccine encoding CMV antigens safely induces durable expansion of CMV-specific T-cells in healthy adults

La Rosa C; Jeffrey Longmate; Joybelle Martinez; Qiao Zhou; Teodora Kaltcheva; Weimin Tsai; Jennifer Drake; Mary Carroll; Wussow F; Chiuppesi F; Hardwick N; Sanjeet Dadwal; Ibrahim Aldoss; Ryotaro Nakamura; John A. Zaia; Don J. Diamond

Attenuated poxvirus modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) is a useful viral-based vaccine for clinical investigation, because of its excellent safety profile and property of inducing potent immune responses against recombinant (r) antigens. We developed Triplex by constructing an rMVA encoding 3 immunodominant cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigens, which stimulates a host antiviral response: UL83 (pp65), UL123 (IE1-exon4), and UL122 (IE2-exon5). We completed the first clinical evaluation of the Triplex vaccine in 24 healthy adults, with or without immunity to CMV and vaccinia virus (previous DryVax smallpox vaccination). Three escalating dose levels (DL) were administered IM in 8 subjects/DL, with an identical booster injection 28 days later and 1-year follow-up. Vaccinations at all DL were safe with no dose-limiting toxicities. No vaccine-related serious adverse events were documented. Local and systemic reactogenicity was transient and self-limiting. Robust, functional, and durable Triplex-driven expansions of CMV-specific T cells were detected by measuring T-cell surface levels of 4-1BB (CD137), binding to CMV-specific HLA multimers, and interferon-γ production. Marked and durable CMV-specific T-cell responses were also detected in Triplex-vaccinated CMV-seronegatives, and in DryVax-vaccinated subjects. Long-lived memory effector phenotype, associated with viral control during CMV primary infection, was predominantly found on the membrane of CMV-specific and functional T cells, whereas off-target vaccine responses activating memory T cells from the related herpesvirus Epstein-Barr virus remained undetectable. Combined safety and immunogenicity results of MVA in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) recipients and Triplex in healthy adults motivated the initiation of a placebo-controlled multicenter trial of Triplex in HCT patients. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02506933.


Blood | 2011

Characterization of immunologic properties of a second HLA-A2 epitope from a granule protease in CML patients and HLA-A2 transgenic mice

Simon F. Lacey; Corinna La Rosa; Teodora Kaltcheva; Tumul Srivastava; Aprille Seidel; Wendi Zhou; Ravindra Rawal; Katharine Hagen; Aparna Krishnan; Jeff Longmate; Helen A. Andersson; Lisa S. St. John; Ravi Bhatia; Vinod Pullarkat; Stephen J. Forman; Laurence J.N. Cooper; Jeffrey J. Molldrem; Don J. Diamond

The serine proteases, neutrophil elastase (HNE) and proteinase 3 (PR3), are aberrantly expressed in human myeloid leukemias. T-cell responses to these proteins have been correlated with remission in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Human PR3/HNE-specific CD8(+) T cells predominantly recognize a nonameric HLA-A2-restricted T-cell epitope called PR1 which is conserved in both Ags. However, CML patients have CD8(+) T cells in peripheral blood recognizing an additional HLA-A2 epitope termed PR2. To assess immunologic properties of these Ags, novel recombinant vaccinia viruses (rVV) expressing PR3 and HNE were evaluated in HLA-A2 transgenic (Tg) mice (HHDII). Immunization of HHDII mice with rVV-PR3 elicited a robust PR3-specific CD8(+) T-cell response dominated by recognition of PR2, with minimal recognition of the PR1 epitope. This result was unexpected, because the PR2 peptide has been reported to bind poorly to HLA. To account for these findings, we proposed that HHDII mice negatively selected PR1-specific T cells because of the presence of this epitope within murine PR3 and HNE, leading to immunodominance of PR2-specific responses. PR2-specific splenocytes are cytotoxic to targets expressing naturally processed PR3, though PR1-specific splenocytes are not. We conclude that PR2 represents a functional T-cell epitope recognized in mice and human leukemia patients. These studies are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00716911.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2013

Detection and preliminary characterization of CD8+T lymphocytes specific for Wilms’ tumor antigen in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Anna Israyelyan; Corinna La Rosa; Weimin Tsai; Teodora Kaltcheva; Tumul Srivastava; Lia Aquino; Jianqiang Li; Young Hyo Kim; Joycelynne Palmer; Leanne Streja; David Senitzer; John A. Zaia; Andreas Rosenwald; Stephen J. Forman; Ryotaro Nakamura; Don J. Diamond

Abstract Wilms’ tumor antigen (WT1) is overexpressed in many different solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. However, little is known about WT1 expression or WT1-specific immune responses in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). In a cross-sectional survey study, we investigated the immune recognition of WT1 by patients with NHL. Utilizing a WT1 overlapping peptide library, we discovered that a large percentage of patients with NHL of all grades maintain WT1-specific T cells. Ex vivo frequencies of these T cells measured from unfractionated samples by the CD137 activation marker assay were high in many patients (some > 1% CD8+). Using standard in vitro techniques we discovered that they were cytotoxic to WT1 peptide library-loaded T2 cells and WT1 antigen-primed autologous Epstein–Barr virus-transformed B cell lines (EBV-LCLs) and expressed interferon gamma (IFN-γ). In addition, we detected WT1 mRNA transcripts in diseased lymph node tissues of patients with NHL utilizing real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) technology. These results are the first example of strong T cell reactivity against WT1 in patients with NHL which also demonstrate strong cytotoxicity against peptide-loaded tumor cells. The potential for developing WT1 as a target for immunotherapy in NHL deserves further exploration.


Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract 2882: p53MVA therapy in patients with refractory gastrointestinal malignancies primes robust CD8+ T cell responses

Nicola Hardwick; Mary Carroll; Teodora Kaltcheva; Dajun Qian; Jonathan Espenschied; Lucille Leong; Peiguo Chu; Joseph Kim; Joseph Chao; Marwan Fakih; Joshua Ellenhorn; Don J. Diamond; Vincent Chung

PURPOSE: To conduct a Phase I safety trial of a Modified Vaccinia Ankara vaccine delivering wild type human p53 (p53MVA) in patients with refractory gastrointestinal malignancies. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Three patients were vaccinated with 108 pfu p53MVA followed by nine patients at 5.6 x 108 pfu. Toxicity was classified using the NCI Common Toxicity Criteria and clinical responses were assessed by CT scan. Peripheral blood samples were collected pre vaccine and post vaccination for immunophenotyping and assessment of p53MVA induced immune response. RESULTS: p53MVA immunization was well tolerated at both doses, with no adverse events above grade 2. Induction of strong T cell and antibody responses to the MVA backbone were apparent. CD4+ and CD8+ T cells showing enhanced recognition of a p53 overlapping peptide library were detectable after the first immunization, particularly in the CD8+ T cell compartment (p=0.03). However in most patients this did not expand further with the second and third immunization. Some patients exhibited a decline in myeloid-derived suppressor cells post vaccine, but this was not statistically significant. The frequency of PD-1+ T cells detectable in patients PBMC was significantly higher than healthy controls. Furthermore, the frequency of PD-1+ CD8+ T cells showed an inverse correlation with the peak CD8+ T cell response to p53 (p=0.02). CONCLUSION: p53MVA was well tolerated and induced robust CD8+ T cell responses. Combination of p53MVA with immune checkpoint inhibition could improve sustained immune responses and lead to clinical benefit. Citation Format: Nicola Hardwick, Mary Carroll, Teodora Kaltcheva, Dajun Qian, Jonathan Espenschied, Lucille Leong, Peiguo Chu, Joseph Kim, Joseph Chao, Marwan Fakih, Joshua Ellenhorn, Don Diamond, Vincent Chung. p53MVA therapy in patients with refractory gastrointestinal malignancies primes robust CD8+ T cell responses. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr 2882. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-2882


Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

p53MVA therapy in patients with refractory gastrointestinal malignancies elevates p53-specific CD8+ T cell responses

Nicola Hardwick; Mary Carroll; Teodora Kaltcheva; Dajun Qian; Dean Lim; Lucille Leong; Peiguo Chu; Joseph Kim; Joseph Chao; Marwan Fakih; Yun Yen; Jonathan Espenschied; Joshua Ellenhorn; Don J. Diamond; Vincent Chung


Blood | 2011

Suppressing Immunosuppressive Pathways by RNA Interference Synergizes with Tumor Antigen Vaccines Causing Long-Term Regression of Established Subcutaneous Lymphomas

Edwin R. Manuel; Céline A. Blache; Teodora Kaltcheva; Fernanda V. V. Castro; Don J. Diamond


Journal of Virology | 2018

Multiantigenic Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara Vaccine Vectors To Elicit Potent Humoral and Cellular Immune Reponses against Human Cytomegalovirus in Mice

Flavia Chiuppesi; Jenny Nguyen; Soojin Park; Heidi Contreras; Mindy Kha; Zhuo Meng; Teodora Kaltcheva; Angelina Iniguez; Joy Martinez; Corinna La Rosa; Felix Wussow; Don J. Diamond

Collaboration


Dive into the Teodora Kaltcheva's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Don J. Diamond

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Corinna La Rosa

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John A. Zaia

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ryotaro Nakamura

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edwin R. Manuel

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeff Longmate

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simon F. Lacey

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephen J. Forman

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Céline A. Blache

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennifer Drake

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge