Major role of the effector to target ratio in rituximab mediated B cell depletion and interferon-Γ production by NK cells: Relevance in NHL and B-cell CLL

2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (16_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2566-2566 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Dall’ozzo ◽  
C. Kantari ◽  
G. Cartron ◽  
C. Le Guellec ◽  
P. Bardos ◽  
...  
2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (S2) ◽  
Author(s):  
L Pantanowitz ◽  
K Früh ◽  
D Aboulafia ◽  
S Marconi ◽  
BJ Dezube

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pulukool Sandhya ◽  
Abhinav Jain ◽  
Geeta Govindaraj

The evolution of COVID-19 as a global pandemic and emerging evidence from cohorts of patients have provided an immense opportunity to understand biological processes pertinent to development of the disease. The immune system is central to the development of characteristic hyperinflammation. In an attempt to understand the role of humoral immunity in COVID-19, reports encompassing patients with primary immunodeficiency (PID)(13 patients) and on B cell depletion therapies(39 patients) who had concurrent COVID-19 were reviewed. In PIDs, patients with common variable immunodeficiency had worse outcomes than patients with agammaglobulinemia. Among the patients on B cell depletion therapy, heterogenous outcome was seen. As a group, patients with multiple sclerosis had better outcomes as compared to patients with systemic autoimmunity. Further, increasing reports of autoimmunity and autoinflammatory diseases occurring in temporal relation to COVID-19 is also evidence for the pathogenic role played by B cells. B cell depletion in the setting of COVID-19 may not be harmful in all patients and in fact may be protective in some scenarios. Identification of risk factors associated with a worse outcome in patients on B cell therapy could provide a rationale for individualised management.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 345-345
Author(s):  
Steven D. Hughes ◽  
Rafael A. Ponce ◽  
Cecile Krejsa ◽  
Werner Frings ◽  
Stephanie Bartsch ◽  
...  

Abstract IL-21 is a cytokine produced by activated CD4+ T cells that augments the growth, survival, and function of NK, T and phagocytic cells. IL-21 also plays an important role in regulating B cell proliferation and differentiation. In a previous study of cynomolgus monkeys treated with recombinant human IL-21, we demonstrated increased numbers of NK cells and phagocytic cells expressing Fcγ RI and III, enhancement of ex vivo antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity, altered lymphocyte trafficking, and improved B cell depletion with subclinical doses of rituximab. The current study aimed to extend these findings to a clinically relevant rituximab dose regimen, and to evaluate the safety and tolerability of IL-21 administration in this setting. Three groups of cynomolgus monkeys (n=8) were treated by IV injection once weekly for four weeks with rituximab (10 mg/kg), concurrently with vehicle or IL-21 (0.3 or 1.5 mg/kg). Standard toxicology data were collected. The number and activation state of peripheral blood leukocyte subsets were determined by flow cytometry. Effects on B cells within spleen and lymph nodes were evaluated by immunohistochemistry. Co-administration of rituximab and IL-21 was well tolerated at both dose levels of IL-21 tested. The primary toxicological responses to the combination treatment were moderate anemia and thrombocytopenia, which were IL-21 dose dependent and similar in magnitude to those observed in previous IL-21 toxicology studies. In animals treated with rituximab alone, circulating B cells were depleted to a nadir 0.3–3 % of baseline on Day 11 of the study (Figure 1). In contrast, significantly lower B cell nadirs were observed following the first treatment with rituximab and IL-21 combination therapy (p< 0.01, ANOVA). In animals receiving the 1.5 mg/kg dose of IL-21, circulating B cells were depleted to a nadir 0 −1 % of baseline on Day 4, followed by partial recovery and further depletion to 0.3 – 2% of baseline on Day 11. More importantly, B cell recovery was significantly delayed in the group treated with rituximab and 1.5 mg/kg IL-21, compared to rituximab treatment alone (p< 0.05, ANOVA/PLSD). Thirty days following the fourth and final treatment, B cell numbers had recovered to only 6% of baseline, compared to 22% in the rituximab monotherapy treated group. Additionally, coadministration of IL-21 with rituximab increased circulating activated monocytes, granulocytes and NK cells compared with rituximab monotherapy. In conclusion, addition of IL-21 to a standard weekly, 4-dose regimen of IV rituximab was well-tolerated in cynomolgus monkeys and resulted in more complete, rapid and durable depletion of circulating CD20-expressing target cells. As depletion of B cells in this model serves as a surrogate for clearance of CD20-expressing malignant cells, these data support the evaluation of IL-21 and rituximab combination therapy in patients with advanced CD20 positive malignancies. Figure Figure


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 113 (16) ◽  
pp. 3735-3743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Zalevsky ◽  
Irene W. L. Leung ◽  
Sher Karki ◽  
Seung Y. Chu ◽  
Eugene A. Zhukovsky ◽  
...  

Abstract CD19, a B cell–restricted receptor critical for B-cell development, is expressed in most B-cell malignancies. The Fc-engineered anti-CD19 antibody, XmAb5574, has enhanced Fcγ receptor (FcγR) binding affinity, leading to improved FcγR-dependent effector cell functions and antitumor activity in murine xenografts compared with the non–Fc-engineered anti-CD19 IgG1 analog. Here, we use XmAb5574 and anti-CD19 IgG1 to further dissect effector cell functions in an immune system closely homologous to that of humans, the cynomolgus monkey. XmAb5574 infusion caused an immediate and dose-related B-cell depletion in the blood (to <10% of baseline levels) concomitant with a sustained reduction of natural killer (NK) cells. NK cells had fully recovered by day 15, whereas B-cell recovery was underway by day 57. B cells in secondary lymphoid tissues were depleted (to 34%-61% of vehicle), with involuted germinal centers apparent in the spleen. Anti-CD19 IgG1 had comparable serum exposure to XmAb5574 but demonstrated no B-cell depletion and no sustained NK-cell reduction. Thus, increasing FcγR binding affinity dramatically increased B-cell clearing. We propose that effector cell functions, possibly those involving NK cells, mediate XmAb5574 potency in cynomolgus monkeys, and that enhancing these mechanisms should advance the treatment of B-cell malignancies in humans.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1980-1980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Loic Ysebaert ◽  
Christian Klein ◽  
Anne Quillet-Mary

Abstract Introduction: Ibrutinib is an irreversible first-in-class inhibitor of BTK (Bruton tyrosine kinase) approved for the therapy of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Ongoing or planned clinical studies evaluate the combination of ibrutinib the CD20 antibodies rituximab or obinutuzumab (GA101) in CLL (first-line and relapsed). However, some concerns have emerged due to published preclinical data showing that ibrutinib can interfere with efficacy of therapeutic antibodies in vitro and in vivo through two main mechanisms, (i) inhibition of NK-dependent ADCC through specific targeting of BTK/ITK signaling in effector cells (Kohrt et al., Blood, 2014 Mar 20;123(12):1957-60), and (ii) through modulation of CD20 expression at the surface of tumor target cells (Bojarczuk B et al. Leukemia 2014;28:1163-67). Nevertheless, clinical trials show an increased overall response rate comparing rituximab+ibrutinib and ibrutinib alone (Burger J., ASH 2013, Abstract 675). Two intriguing points prompted us to conduct our current study: (i) 0.1-1microM ibrutinib doses were used in these published data, and in phase I studies, mean peak concentration of ibrutinib 420mg/d in CLL patients were 72ng/ml (0.16microM), and (ii) loss of CD20 expression recovered rapidly after wash-out periods. We therefore evaluated B-cell depletion induced by rituximab (RTX) and obinutuzumab (GA101) in vitro, using peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples taken from relapsed CLL patients (pts) under ibrutinib monotherapy (420mg/d). Methods: In 8 pts (median prior lines=4, range=2-8), PBMCs were collected before ibrutinib initiation and after 1 and 2 months of therapy. PBMC were seeded at 10 x 106 cells/mL in culture medium and treated for 7 days with 10µg/mL control IgG1 (trastuzumab), rituximab or GA101. The specific percentage of remaining B cells in monoclonal antibodies–treated samples was calculated as (absolute number in treated samples/absolute number in control samples) x 100. For each condition, the absolute number of remaining B cells was calculated as total viable cell number (trypan blue exclusion determination) x % of viable CD19+/CD5+ lymphocytes (flow cytometry determination). For statistical analyses, Student's test (paired, two-sided) was used. Results:In patients prior to start of ibrutinib treatment, GA101-induced B cell depletion was significantly higher than that observed with rituximab (mean 51.4% vs 32.4%) as shown in Figure 1 (**p<0.01; *p<0.05). After 1 month of ibrutinib exposure, hyperlymphocytosis and spleen/lymph node shrinkage were noticed in 8/8 pts. Samples were collected to re-assess ADCC using the same treatment conditions. Both, GA101- and rituximab-mediated B-cell depletion were significantly reduced (RTX: mean 32.4% vs 9.3%, GA101: 51.4% vs 19.3%), thus confirming previously published in vitro data suggesting ibrutinib may indeed have a detrimental effect on rituximab, but may also affect B cell depletion mediated by GA101. Importantly, for the first time, these effects were evaluated with physiological doses of ibrutinib in each sample (as derived from patients under treatment), in a 100% autologous system, with relevant effector:target ratio. Yet, this decrease of ADCC efficacy was unlikely explained by the nature of target cells (newly mobilized CLL cells that may be more refractory to therapy-refractory), the decreased E:T ratio (induced by mobilizing CLL cells, whereas there was no significant expansion of NK cells under ibrutinib therapy, data not shown), or ibrutinib dose. Indeed, when samples were collected at month 2 when pts still had high lymphocyte counts to monitor ADCC efficacy, we observed a strong restoration of both rituximab- and GA101-mediated B-cell depletion (RTX: mean 46% vs 9.3%, GA101: 66.8% vs 19.3%). One hypothesis, currently addressed in our lab, is that NK cells may become independent from ITK signaling and thus recover full efficacy after 2 months of ibrutinib therapy. Conclusions: Previous preclinical investigations suggesting antagonistic effects between rituximab and ibrutinib were confirmed by our tests using ibrutinib-exposed PBMCs from CLL patients under ibrutinib treatment. Yet, over time a significant recovery of ADCC over time was observed, and since complement components are left unaffected by ibrutinib, the combination of ibrutinib and rituximab or GA101 are supported. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Klein: Roche: Employment, Equity Ownership, Patents & Royalties.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengping Wu ◽  
Jinfang Gao ◽  
Jie Kang ◽  
Xuexue Wang ◽  
Qing Niu ◽  
...  

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a common, chronic, systemic autoimmune disease, and its clinical features are the proliferation of joint synovial tissue, the formation of pannus and the destruction of cartilage. The global incidence of RA is about 1%, and it is more common in women. The basic feature of RA is the body’s immune system disorders, in which autoreactive CD4+T cells, pathogenic B cells, M1 macrophages, inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and autoantibodies abnormally increase in the body of RA patients B cell depletion therapy has well proved the important role of B cells in the pathogenesis of RA, and the treatment of RA with B cells as a target has also been paid more and more attention. Although the inflammatory indicators in RA patients receiving B-cell depletion therapy have been significantly improved, the risk of infection and cancer has also increased, which suggests that we need to deplete pathogenic B cells instead of all B cells. However, at present we cannot distinguish between pathogenic B cells and protective B cells in RA patients. In this review, we explore fresh perspectives upon the roles of B cells in the occurrence, development and treatment of RA.


Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
Mar Naranjo-Gomez ◽  
Marine Cahen ◽  
Jennifer Lambour ◽  
Myriam Boyer-Clavel ◽  
Mireia Pelegrin

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are now considered as a therapeutic approach to prevent and treat severe viral infections. Using a mouse retroviral model, we showed that mAbs induce protective immunity (vaccinal effects). Here, we investigated the role of natural killer (NK) cells on this effect. NK cells are effector cells that are crucial to control viral propagation upon mAb treatment. However, their immunomodulatory activity during antiviral mAb immunotherapies has been little studied. Our data reveal that the mAb treatment of infected mice preserves the functional activation of NK cells. Importantly, functional NK cells play an essential role in preventing immune dysfunction and inducing antiviral protective immunity upon mAb therapy. Thus, NK cell depletion in mAb-treated, viral-infected mice leads to the upregulation of molecules involved in immunosuppressive pathways (i.e., PD-1, PD-L1 and CD39) on dendritic cells and T cells. NK cell depletion also abrogates the vaccinal effects induced by mAb therapy. Our data also reveal a role for IFNγ-producing NK cells in the enhancement of the B-cell responses through the potentiation of the B-cell helper properties of neutrophils. These findings suggest that preserved NK cell functions and counts might be required for achieving mAb-induced protective immunity. They open new prospects for improving antiviral immunotherapies.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document