7. Adoptive immunotherapy of post–transplant hematological CML relapse with donor lymphocyte infusion and interferon-α

2001 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. S20-S21
Author(s):  
A. Pieczonka ◽  
J. Wachowiak ◽  
D. Boruczkowski ◽  
M. Leda ◽  
D. Ładoń ◽  
...  
2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (5p1) ◽  
pp. 933-946 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baolin Liu ◽  
Jianqiang Hao ◽  
Yisheng Pan ◽  
Bin Luo ◽  
Britt Westgard ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1646-1646
Author(s):  
Nicolaus Kroeger ◽  
Avichai Shimoni ◽  
Maria Zagrivnaja ◽  
Francis Ayuk ◽  
Michael Lioznov ◽  
...  

Abstract To improve anti-myeloma effect of donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) after allogeneic stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma, we investigated in a phase I/II study the effect of low dose thalidomide (100 mg) followed by DLI in 18 patients with progressive disease or residual disease and prior ineffective DLI after allografting. The median age was 53 years (range 31–64). Twelve patients received prior DLI and either relapsed again (n=1), or showed no response (PD: n=3; SD: n=8). The overall response rate was 67% including 22% complete remission. Major toxicity of thalidomide was weakness grade I/II (68%) and peripheral neuropathy grade I/II (28%). Only 2 patients experienced mild grade I acute graft versus host disease (aGvHD) of the skin, while no grade II-IV aGvHD was seen. De novo limited chronic GvHD (cGvHD) was seen in two patients (11%). The median time to response was 108 days (range, 36–266 days). In 5 patients not responding to 100 mg, the dose of thalidomide was increased (200 mg n=4; 300 mg n=1) and subsequently two of them responded with partial remission. In three patients dose escalation of DLI was performed, resulting in one minor and one partial remission. No difference regarding response was observed between unrelated and related donors (66% each). Five out of 6 patients with deletion 13 responded, while 5 out of 9 patients without deletion 13 responded to thalidomide plus DLI. In patients who failed to respond to prior DLI, the disease status could be converted in 6 patients with SD after first DLI into CR (n=2), PR (n=3), MR (n=1) while two with SD remainded SD after thalidomide plus DLI. In three patients with progressive disease after DLI the combination of thalidomide and DLI resulted in one CR, one PR and one minor remission. The two-years estimated overall and progression-free survival was 100 % and 84%, respectively. Adoptive immunotherapy with low dose Thalidomide and DLI induces strong anti-myeloma effect with low incidence of graft versus host disease.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 154-154
Author(s):  
Mauro Di Ianni ◽  
Franca Falzetti ◽  
Alessandra Carotti ◽  
Adelmo Terenzi ◽  
Loredana Ruggeri ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 154 In full haplotype mismatched (HLA-haploidentical) stem cell transplantation we showed adoptive transfer of freshly isolated donor CD4+CD25+ FoxP3+ T regulatory cells (Tregs) followed by donor T cells (Tcons) prevented acute and chronic GvHD without any post-transplant immunosuppression, promoted lymphoid reconstitution and improved immunity against opportunistic pathogens (Di Ianni et al., Blood 2011). The major drawback was the extra-haematological toxicity of the conditioning regimen which included TBI, thiotepa, fludarabine and cyclophosphamide. To reduce regimen related toxicity we replaced cyclophosphamide with alemtuzumab, given 22 days before the Treg infusion to prevent it from interfering with adoptive T cell immunotherapy (Fig 1). The graft consisted of immunoselected Tregs (median 2×106/kg; range 1.6–4.8; FoxP3+ cells 92% ± 8 SD;), CD34+ cells (median 9.1×106/kg; range 8.1–10.9) and Tcons (median 1×106/kg; range 0.5–3). No post-transplant prophylaxis against GvHD was given. Since May 2010 18 patients (median age 43 years, range 23–61) with high risk acute leukaemia (16 AML, 2 ALL) have been transplanted. All sustained full donor-type engraftment. Neutrophils reached 0.5×109/L at a median of 12 days (range 9–28 days). Platelets reached 20×109/L and 50×109/L at median of 12 and 15 days, respectively (range 10–36 days and 11–55 days). CD4+ and CD8+ peripheral blood counts reached, respectively, 50/μL medianly on days 36 (range 27 – 120 days) and 34 (range 15– 85); 100/μL medianly on days 55 (range 27 – 147 days) and 48 (range 27 – 114); 200/μL on days 62 (range 37 – 177 days) and 49 (range 28 – 147). We observed a rapid development of a wide T-cell repertoire with specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells for opportunistic pathogen antigen such as Aspergillus, Candida, CMV, ADV, HSV, VZV, Toxoplasma. Treg immunotherapy did not compromise post-transplant generation of donor-vs-recipient alloreactive natural killer (NK) cell repertoires in patients who received transplants from NK alloreactive donors (Ruggeri et al., Science 2002). Three of 16 valuable patients developed acute GvHD. Two responded to a short course of immunosuppressive therapy and at present (288 and 360 days after transplant) are alive and well with very good immunological reconstitution. The 3rd patient died of infectious complications. Two other patients died of non-leukemic causes (1 fulminant hepatitis 17 days post-transplant, 1 pneumonia 14 days post-transplant). The incidence of TRM is 17% (3/18). As hoped, extra-haematological toxicity was mild. One AML patient, who received a transplant from a non-NK alloreactive donor, relapsed 77 days post-transplant. Fourteen of the 18 patients are alive and well at a minimum follow-up of 3 months. This study shows adoptive immunotherapy with freshly isolated, naturally occurring Tregs is a feasible option in HLA-haploidentical stem cell transplantation since alloantigen-specific Tregs were efficiently activated in vivo and controlled alloreactivity of at least 1×106/kg Tcons without clinically significant inhibition of general immunity. Moreover Treg infusion did not weaken the GvL effect. The incidence of post-transplant leukaemia relapse was surprisingly low as only 1 patient has relapsed to date and even in our previous series no patient who was transplanted in CR has relapsed at a median follow-up of 25 months. Infusion of high numbers of Tcons in the absence of post-transplant immunosuppression can be hypothesized to exert a GvL effect. In addition, in patients who were transplanted from NK alloreactive donors, preservation of alloreactive NK cell repertoires played a key role in reducing the incidence of relapse. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (10) ◽  
pp. 3361-3363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolaus Kröger ◽  
Avichai Shimoni ◽  
Maria Zagrivnaja ◽  
Francis Ayuk ◽  
Michael Lioznov ◽  
...  

Abstract To improve the antimyeloma effect of donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) after allogeneic stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma, we investigated in a phase 1/2 study the effect of low-dose thalidomide (100 mg) followed by DLI in 18 patients with progressive disease or residual disease and prior ineffective DLI after allografting. The overall response rate was 67%, including 22% complete remission. Major toxicity of thalidomide was weakness grade I/II (68%) and peripheral neuropathy grade I/II (28%). Only 2 patients experienced mild grade I acute graft versus host disease (aGvHD) of the skin, while no grades II to IV aGvHD was seen. De novo limited chronic GvHD (cGvHD) was seen in 2 patients (11%). The 2-year estimated overall and progression-free survival were 100% and 84%, respectively. Adoptive immunotherapy with low-dose thalidomide and DLI induces a strong antimyeloma effect with low incidence of graft versus host disease. (Blood. 2004;104:3361-3363)


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 647-647
Author(s):  
Kimberly Noonan ◽  
Leo Luznik ◽  
Ivan M. Borrello

Abstract Abstract 647 Background: Donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI) has limited efficacy and is associated with substantial graft vs host disease (GVHD) in treating relapse after allogeneic BMT (alloBMT) in large part due to the absence of significant tumor specificity. Thus, novel strategies are required that increase the tumor specificity with reduced alloreactivity. High-dose Cy post-BMT effectively reduces GVHD through early elimination of allo-reactive T cells and enables immune reconstitution free of ongoing pharmacologic immunosuppression. Since the BM is both the site of disease in most hematologic malignancies and a reservoir of tumor specific T cells, we hypothesized that marrow infiltrating lymphocytes (MILs) collected after alloBMT in patients treated with high-dose Cy could be a source of tumor-specific T cells for adoptive immunotherapy. Methods: BM was obtained from patients 2 –12 months after HLA-matched alloBMT on the clinical trial using high-dose post-transplant Cy as a single agent GVHD prophylaxis. The MILs were activated and expanded with CD3/CD28 antibody-coated beads. Results: Allo-MILs can be reproducibly expanded (574-fold avg expansion; 14–2000) at all time points tested. The activated allo-MILs are not anergic, exhibit anti-HLA-reactivity against third party allo-antigens but do not respond to recipient allo-antigens. Tumor-specific MILs were significantly expanded as determined by reactivity to HL60/K562 myeloid cell lysates (P<0.0001; pre- vs. post-activation). In contrast, no change was observed in cultures pulsed with irrelevant antigens, thus suggesting the specificity of the response. The ability to expand allogeneic antigen-specific MILs was also confirmed with a 15.5 fold expansion of PR-1 specific (HLA) A*0201-restricted CD8+ T-cells using tetramers. Conclusions: We can augment the tumor-specificity of MILs obtained post-transplant with minimal allo-reactivity in patients treated with post-BMT high-dose Cy. This could represent a novel approach to highly tumor-specific DLI. A phase I/II trial is planned to assess the safety and feasibility of administering ex vivo expanded post-transplant, allogeneic MILs to patients with relapsed hematologic malignancies after alloHSCT. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document