Researchers from the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore (NUS Medicine) and National Centre for Nanoscience and Technology, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), have jointly developed an approach to significantly reduce the risk of cancer recurrence and metastasis after surgery, by targeting both bulk cancer cells and the elusive cancer stem cells (CSCs) responsible for relapse.
One of the biggest challenges in cancer treatment is preventing the disease from returning or spreading to other parts of the body. Cancer recurrence happens when some cancer cells survive treatment (such as surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation) and begin to grow again at the original site or nearby.
What makes cancer recurrence especially problematic is the presence of CSCs – a small but powerful subset of cells within a tumour. These cells are more resistant to conventional treatments and are thought to be the root cause of both recurrence and metastasis. They can lie dormant for a period of time, evade detection by the immune system, and then reignite tumour growth later on.
“This nanovaccine approach is especially exciting because it tackles one of the biggest hurdles in cancer therapy – the ability of stem-like tumour cells to cause cancer relapse,” said Professor Shawn Chen Xiaoyuan, Nasrat Muzayyin Professor in Medicine and Technology from the Department of Diagnostic Radiology, and Director of the Nanomedicine Translational Research Programme at NUS Medicine. “Our results show that our nanovaccine not only activates the immune system to attack these cells, but also creates lasting memory to help prevent the cancer from returning.” Prof Chen is also from the Department of Diagnostic Radiology at NUS Medicine.
Published in Nature Nanotechnology, the study describes a nanovaccine named NICER (Nanovesicle Integrating CSC-specific antigen display and epigenetic nano-regulator encapsulation), which delivers a dual blow to cancer: eradicating both the main tumour mass and the residual CSCs behind post-surgery.
“Cancer stem cells are a key reason why tumours can return and spread after treatment. They’re resistant to most therapies and hard to eliminate. NICER changes that,” said Dr Yanlian Yang, CAS Key Laboratory of Standardization and Measurement for Nanotechnology, CAS Key Laboratory for Biological Effects of Nanomaterials and Nanosafety, National Center for Nanoscience and Technology, Beijing, China. The NICER nanovaccine helps the immune system destroy cancers more effectively by eradicating both CSCs and cancer cells. The result is a potentially stronger and longer-lasting immune response that could help stop the cancer from coming back.
“In laboratory models which included breast cancer, melanoma, and highly invasive CSC-enriched tumours, NICER not only halted tumour growth but also reduced recurrence and lung metastasis following surgical tumour removal,” said first author Dr Qing You, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, NUS Medicine. “When combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors, the vaccine demonstrated synergistic effects, enhancing tumour control and survival outcomes.”
“While these findings are promising, further studies are needed to assess long-term safety across diverse laboratory models,” added Prof Chen. “Next-generation enhancements could further boost efficacy through precision immune cell targeting and improved antigen design.”
The study marks a major step forward in post-operative cancer immunotherapy, offering hope for more eventual, durable treatment outcomes and a new frontier in personalised cancer vaccines.