scholarly journals Peripheral T cell receptor diversity is associated with clinical outcomes following ipilimumab treatment in metastatic melanoma

Author(s):  
Michael A. Postow ◽  
Manuarii Manuel ◽  
Phillip Wong ◽  
Jianda Yuan ◽  
Zhiwan Dong ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Ye ◽  
A Olsson-Brown ◽  
R. A. Watson ◽  
V. T. F. Cheung ◽  
R. D. Morgan ◽  
...  

1Abstract1.1BackgroundImmune checkpoint blockers (ICBs) activate CD8+ T cells to elicit anti-cancer activity but frequently lead to immune-related adverse events (irAEs). The relationship of irAE with baseline parameters and clinical outcome is unclear. We investigated associations between irAE development, CD8+ T cell receptor diversity and expression and clinical outcome in a non-trial setting.1.2MethodsPatients ≥18 years old with metastatic melanoma (MM) receiving combination ICB (ipilimumab plus nivolumab – cICB, n=60) or single-agent ICB (nivolumab/pembrolizumab – sICB, n=78) were prospectively recruited. We retrospectively evaluated the impact of irAEs on survival. This analysis was repeated in an independent cohort of MM patients treated at a separate institution (n=210, cICB:74, sICB:136). We performed RNA sequencing of CD8+ T cells isolated from patients prior to treatment, analysing T cell receptor clonality differential transcript expression according to irAE development.1.3Results48.6% of patients experienced treatment-related irAEs within the first 5 cycles of treatment. Development of irAE prior to the 5th cycle of ICB was associated with longer progression-free and overall survival (PFS, OS) in the primary cohort (log-rank test, PFS: P=0.00034; OS: P<0.0001), replicated in the secondary cohort (OS: P=0.00064). Across cohorts median survival for those patients not experiencing irAE was 14.4 (95% CI:9.6-19.5) months vs not-reached (95% CI:28.9 - Inf), P=3.0×10−7. Pre-treatment performance status and neutrophil count, but not BMI, were additional predictors of clinical outcome. Analysis of CD8+ T cells from 128 patients demonstrated irAE development was associated with increased T cell receptor diversity post-treatment (P=4.3×10−5). Development of irAE in sICB recipients was additionally associated with baseline differential expression of 224 transcripts (FDR<0.1), enriched in pro-inflammatory pathway genes including CYP4F3 and PTGS2.1.4ConclusionsEarly irAE development post-ICB is strongly associated with favourable survival in MM and increased diversity of peripheral CD8+ T cell receptors after treatment. irAE post-sICB is associated with pre-treatment upregulation of inflammatory pathways, indicating irAE development may reflect baseline immune activation states.Key messageImmune-related adverse events (irAEs) commonly occur in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy. In real world setting we find development of early irAEs post-ICB treatment is associated with survival benefit, indicative of a shared mechanism with anti-tumour efficacy. CD8+ T cells from patients who develop irAE show increased receptor diversity, and pre-treatment samples from patients who develop irAE post single-agent anti-PD1 show over-expression of inflammatory pathways, indicating baseline immune state can determine irAE development.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (S3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Postow ◽  
Manuarii Manuel ◽  
Phillip Wong ◽  
Jianda Yuan ◽  
Marlene Noel ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e14552-e14552
Author(s):  
Siao-Yi Wang ◽  
Gina Scurti ◽  
Annika Dalheim ◽  
Tamson Moore ◽  
Michael Nishimura

e14552 Background: Metastatic melanoma remains a fatal disease as many patients fail to respond to novel therapies. Presently, we have an ongoing trial utilizing T cell receptor (TCR)-modified cells reactive to the melanoma antigen, tyrosinase, for treatment of metastatic melanoma (NCT01586403). Current protocols using viral vectors to generate cells for adoptive transfer require activation in the presence of IL-2. While IL-2 stimulates proliferation and production of mature effector cells, it also induces T cell exhaustion. We hypothesize that tyrosinase-reactive TCR-modified cells generated in the absence of activation have an increased potential for expansion, persistence, and anti-melanoma activity. In these studies, we investigate whether IL-7, a homeostatic regulator, facilitates the transfer of a tyrosinase-reactive TCR to lymphocytes without activation. Methods: Gene-modified cells were generated using a lentiviral vector including alpha and beta chains of a TCR reactive to tyrosinase and a truncated CD34 molecule as a transduction marker. Peripheral lymphocytes from normal human donors were transduced with lentivirus following no treatment, treatment with IL-7, or activation in the presence of IL-2. Transduced CD34 positive cells were isolated using magnetic activated cell sorting (MACS) and injected intravenously into NOD scid gamma (NSG) mice. Results: We found that IL-7 treatment improved transduction in non-activated cells and resulted in expression levels of CD34 and TCR variable beta chain 12 (vbeta12) comparable to cells activated in the presence of IL-2. When non-activated tyrosinase-reactive TCR-modified human T cells were adoptively transferred into NOD NSG mice, the cells were detectable in the peripheral blood of mice up to 7 days after transfer. Conclusions: These findings suggest that generating melanoma antigen TCR-modified cells in the absence of activation for adoptive transfer is feasible with IL-7 treatment. Ongoing studies in NSG mice transplanted with melanoma will help determine whether non-activated gene-modified cells will improve the efficacy and longevity of cell therapy for melanoma and other malignancies.


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