Faculty Opinions recommendation of Transferred WT1-reactive CD8+ T cells can mediate antileukemic activity and persist in post-transplant patients.

Author(s):  
Warren J Leonard
2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (174) ◽  
pp. 174ra27-174ra27 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. G. Chapuis ◽  
G. B. Ragnarsson ◽  
H. N. Nguyen ◽  
C. N. Chaney ◽  
J. S. Pufnock ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 1147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lemerle ◽  
Garnier ◽  
Planchais ◽  
Brilland ◽  
Subra ◽  
...  

Predictive biomarkers of acute rejection (AR) are lacking. Pre-transplant expression of CD45RC on blood CD8+ T cells has been shown to predict AR in kidney transplant (KT) patients. The objective of the present study was to study CD45RC expression in a large cohort of KT recipients exposed to modern immunosuppressive regimens. CD45RC expression on T cells was analyzed in 128 KT patients, where 31 patients developed AR, of which 24 were found to be T-cell mediated (TCMR). Pre-transplant CD4+ and CD8+ CR45RChigh T cell proportions were significantly higher in patients with AR. The frequency of CD45RChigh T cells was significantly associated with age at transplantation but was not significantly different according to gender, history of transplantation, pre-transplant immunization, and de novo donor specific anti-Human Leucocyte Antigen (HLA) antibody. Survival-free AR was significantly better in patients with CD8+ CD45RChigh T cells below 58.4% (p = 0.0005), but not different according to CD4+ T cells (p = 0.073). According to multivariate analysis, CD8+ CD45RChigh T cells above 58.4% increased the risk of AR 4-fold (HR 3.96, p = 0.003). Thus, pre-transplant CD45RC expression on CD8+ T cells predicted AR, mainly TCMR, in KT patients under modern immunosuppressive therapies. We suggest that CD45RC expression should be evaluated in a prospective study to validate its usefulness to quantify the pre-transplant risk of AR.


2006 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. S13
Author(s):  
C. Macedo ◽  
I. Popescu ◽  
Y. Hua ◽  
D. Rowe ◽  
S. Webber ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 186 (10) ◽  
pp. 5854-5862 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camila Macedo ◽  
Steven A. Webber ◽  
Albert D. Donnenberg ◽  
Iulia Popescu ◽  
Yun Hua ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1148-1148
Author(s):  
Brett Glotzbecker ◽  
Heidi Mills ◽  
Jacalyn Rosenblatt ◽  
Zekui Wu ◽  
Kerry Wellenstein ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1148 Poster Board I-170 Graft versus host disease (GVHD) remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT). In vivo quantitative T-cell depletion using CAMPATH-1h (anti-CD52) has been explored in an effort to prevent acute GVHD. More recently, a regimen consisting of total lymphoid irradiation and anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) has been shown to polarize T cells towards an inhibitory phenotype potentially reducing the associated risk for GVHD. However, these strategies may be associated with impaired post-transplant immune reconstitution, increased risk of tumor relapse and opportunistic infection. In this study we examined the pattern of cellular immune recovery following T cell depletion with CAMPATH-1h and compared results with an initial cohort of patients undergoing reduced intensity conditioning with TLI and ATG. Immunologic analyses were performed on twenty patients undergoing reduced intensity conditioning in conjunction with low dose CAMPATH -1h (50 mg) and an initial cohort of 5 patients treated with TLI/ATG. Conditioning with CAMPATH-1h resulted in the significant depletion of CD3, CD4, and CD8 T cells in the early post-transplant period and persistence of CD4 T cell depletion (< 200 cells /uL) for more than 6 months. Following TLI/ATG, persistent depletion of CD4+ T cells was also observed but no significant decrease in CD8 T cells was seen. A two-fold increase in circulating CD56+ NK cells, 21.8 to 41.6% (p=0.004), was seen following TLI-ATG, which was not noted following Campath conditioning. CAMPATH-1h conditioning was associated with a significant decrease in mean CD45RO+ memory T cells in the early post-transplant period (27.2 to 5.7% of the total population of nonadherent peripheral blood mononuclear cells, p=0.034). Relative percentages of naïve T cells (CD45RA+), central memory (CD45RO+CD62L+CCR7+) (CM), and effector memory (CD45RO+CD62L-CCR7-) (EM) T cells remained stable in the pre- and post-transplantation period. The CM:EM was 0.6 pre-transplant and at day 60, respectively. In contrast, T cell recovery in early post-transplant following the TLI/ATG regimen was associated with no reduction in CD45RO+ memory T cells. A significant rise in the relative percentages of naïve T cells from 39 to 61.3% (p=0.04), CM cells from 12 to 32.8% (p=0.05), a corresponding fall in EM cells from 57.9 to 32.5% (p=0.10), and a significant change in the CM:EM levels (0.2 pre-transplant, 1.0 day 60 post-transplant) was noted after TLI/ATG. The mean percentage of regulatory T cells as defined by the percentage of CD4+/CD25+ cells that express FoxP3 rose in the early post-transplant period following both regimens (8 to 20.7% at Day 30, p=0.003 in the CAMPATH group; 5.6 to 16.9% at Day 30, p=0.03 in the ATG/TLI group). Functional analyses demonstrated that the T cell proliferative response to the mitogen, Phytohemagglutinin (PHA), was profoundly depressed following CAMPATH-1h with mean SI decreasing from 34 pre-transplant to 1.4 at Day 30. In contrast, treatment with TLI/ATG resulted in no significant change in T cell proliferation in response to PHA with SI only decreasing from 45 pre-transplant to 36 at Day 30. Assessment of T cell polarization following stimulation with PHA or phorbol-ester (PMA)/ionomycin, recipient derived dendritic cells (DCs) or third party DCs demonstrated a rise of CD8+ T cells expressing, IL-4 and IL-10 consistent with a suppressor phenotype. Minimal T cell proliferation was observed following stimulation with patient derived DCs, which is consistent with suppression of the expansion of alloreactive T cells. In summary, both CAMPATH and TLI/ATG result in CD4+ T cell depletion but TLI/ATG resulted in relative preservation of CD8+ T cells, persistence of memory cells, relative preservation of central memory as compared to memory effector cells and intact response to mitogens. TLI/ATG therapy was also associated with the polarization of CD8+ T cells towards a Tc2 phenotype and lack of proliferation in response to recipient derived DCs. As such, TLI/ATG appears to be associated with more modest level of functional T cell depletion characterized by Tc2 polarization and suppression of host/donor alloreactivity. Disclosures Spitzer: Genzyme: Consultancy. Avigan:Genzyme: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3539-3539
Author(s):  
Jacopo Mariotti ◽  
Kaitlyn Ryan ◽  
Paul Massey ◽  
Nicole Buxhoeveden ◽  
Jason Foley ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3539 Poster Board III-476 Pentostatin has been utilized clinically in combination with irradiation for host conditioning prior to reduced-intensity allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT); however, murine models utilizing pentostatin to facilitate engraftment across fully MHC-disparate barriers have not been developed. To address this deficit in murine modeling, we first compared the immunosuppressive and immunodepleting effects of pentostatin (P) plus cyclophosphamide (C) to a regimen of fludarabine (F) plus (C) that we previously described. Cohorts of mice (n=5-10) received a three-day regimen consisting of P alone (1 mg/kg/d), F alone (100 mg/kg/d), C alone (50 mg/kg/d), or combination PC or FC. Combination PC or FC were each more effective at depleting and suppressing splenic T cells than either agent alone (depletion was quantified by flow cytometry; suppression was quantified by cytokine secretion after co-stimulation). The PC and FC regimens were similar in terms of yielding only modest myeloid suppression. However, the PC regimen was more potent in terms of depleting host CD4+ T cells (p<0.01) and CD8+ T cells (p<0.01), and suppressing their function (cytokine values are pg/ml/0.5×106 cells/ml; all comparisons p<0.05) with respect to capacity to secrete IFN-g (13±5 vs. 48±12), IL-2 (59±44 vs. 258±32), IL-4 (34±10 vs. 104±12), and IL-10 (15±3 vs. 34±5). Next, we evaluated whether T cells harvested from PC-treated and FC-treated hosts were also differentially immune suppressed in terms of capacity to mediate an alloreactive host-versus-graft rejection response (HVGR) in vivo when transferred to a secondary host. BALB/c hosts were lethally irradiated (1050 cGy; day -2), reconstituted with host-type T cells from PC- or FC-treated recipients (day -1; 0.1 × 106 T cells transferred), and challenged with fully allogeneic transplant (B6 donor bone marrow, 10 × 106 cells; day 0). In vivo HVGR was quantified on day 7 post-BMT by cytokine capture flow cytometry: absolute number of host CD4+ T cells secreting IFN-g in an allospecific manner was ([x 106/spleen]) 0.02 ± 0.008 in recipients of PC-treated T cells and 1.55 ± 0.39 in recipients of FC-treated cells (p<0.001). Similar results were obtained for allospecific host CD8+ T cells (p<0.001). Our second objective was to characterize the host immune barrier for engraftment after PC treatment. BALB/c mice were treated for 3 days with PC and transplanted with TCD B6 bone marrow. Surprisingly, such PC-treated recipients developed alloreactive T cells in vivo and ultimately rejected the graft. Because the PC-treated hosts were heavily immune depleted at the time of transplantation, we reasoned that failure to engraft might be due to host immune T cell reconstitution after PC therapy. In an experiment performed to characterize the duration of PC-induced immune depletion and suppression, we found that although immune depletion was prolonged, immune suppression was relatively transient. To develop a more immune suppressive regimen, we extended the C therapy to 14 days (50 mg/Kg) and provided a longer interval of pentostatin therapy (administered on days 1, 4, 8, and 12). This 14-day PC regimen yielded CD4+ and CD8+ T cell depletion similar to recipients of a lethal dose of TBI, more durable immune depletion, but again failed to achieve durable immune suppression, therefore resulting in HVGR and ultimate graft rejection. Finally, through intensification of C therapy (to 100 mg/Kg for 14 days), we were identified a PC regimen that was both highly immune depleting and achieved prolonged immune suppression, as defined by host inability to recover T cell IFN-g secretion for a full 14-day period after completion of PC therapy. Finally, our third objective was to determine with this optimized PC regimen might permit the engraftment of MHC disparate, TCD murine allografts. Indeed, using a BALB/c-into-B6 model, we found that mixed chimerism was achieved by day 30 and remained relatively stable through day 90 post-transplant (percent donor chimerism at days 30, 60, and 90 post-transplant were 28 ± 8, 23 ± 9, and 21 ± 7 percent, respectively). At day 90, mixed chimerism in myeloid, T, and B cell subsets was observed in the blood, spleen, and bone marrow compartments. Pentostatin therefore synergizes with cyclophosphamide to deplete, suppress, and limit immune reconstitution of host T cells, thereby allowing engraftment of T cell-depleted allografts across MHC barriers. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2549-2549
Author(s):  
Karnail Singh ◽  
Swetha Srinivasan ◽  
Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari ◽  
Sharon Sen ◽  
Kelly Hamby ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2549 Introduction: Given the emerging importance of sirolimus as a therapuetic for graft-versus host disease (GvHD), it is critical to rigorously define the mechanisms by which this agent impacts T cell immunity after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Therefore, we have used our novel rhesus macaque model of haploidentical HSCT and GVHD to probe the mechanisms of sirolimus-mediated GvHD prevention when given as a monotherapy. The insights gained from this study will facilitate the rational design of sirolimus-containing combinatorial therapies to maximize immunosuppressive efficacy. Methods: Transplant recipients were prepared with 8Gy total body irradiation and were then infused with MHC-mismatched donor leukopheresis products(n=3, avg. 6.5×108 TNC/kg, 3.4×107 total T cells/kg). Recipients received sirolimus monotherapy (serum troughs 5–15 ng/mL) alone as post-transplant immunosuppresson. Clinical GvHD was monitored according to our standard primate GvHD scoring system and flow cytometric analysis was performed to determine the immune phenotype of sirolimus-treated recipients compared to a cohort of recipients (n= 3) that were given no GvHD immunoprophylaxis. Results: Sirolimus modestly prolonged survival after MHC-mismatched HSCT compared to no immunosuppression (>19 days versus 6.5 days in the untreated cohort, with GvHD confirmed histopathologically at the time of necropsy). We found that sirolimus significantly inhibited lymphocyte proliferation in transplant recipients: The ALC remained suppressed post-transplant (eg ALC of 0.46 × 106/mL on day 15 post-transplant versus 4.3 × 106/mL pre-transplant, with recovery of other leukocytes: WBC=5.1 × 106/mL, ANC=2.6 × 106/mL). These results suggest that sirolimus can have a profound impact on lymphocyte proliferation, inhibiting GvHD-associated lymphocyte expansion by as much as 200–300-fold compared to untreated controls. Sirolimus had a similar impact on CD4+ and CD8+ subpopulation expansion. Thus, while CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells expanded by as much as 300-fold and 2000-fold, respectively, without sirolimus, the expansion of these cells was significantly blunted with sirolimus, with maximal expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells being 4- and 3.6-fold, respectively compared to the post-transplant nadir. Sirolimus-treated recipients also better controlled the upregulation of the proliferation marker Ki-67 on CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. Thus, while untreated recipients upregulated Ki-67 expression by as much as 10-fold after engraftment, (with >80-98% T cells expressing high levels of Ki-67 post-transplant versus 5–10% pre-transplant) sirolimus-treated recipients better controlled Ki-67 expression (17-40% Ki-67-high CD4+ and CD8+ T cells post-transplant). While the impact of sirolimus on T cell proliferation was profound, it failed to completely inhibit activation of T cells, as measured by both Granzyme B and CD127 expression. Thus, when effector CD4+ and CD8+ T cell cytotoxic potential was measured by determining expression levels of granzyme B, we found that sirolimus could not downregulate this key component of immune function and GvHD-mediated target organ damage: Granzyme B expression in both CD4+ and CD8+ CD28-/CD95+ effector T cells was unchanged despite sirolimus monotherapy. Down-regulation of CD127 expression, which identifies activated CD8+ T cells in both humans and rhesus macaques, also demonstrated resistance to sirolimus treatment. Thus, while a cohort of recipients that were treated with combined costimulation blockade and sirolimus maintained stable CD127 levels post-transplant, and untreated animals demonstrated total loss of CD127, up to 60% of CD8+ T cells in sirolimus-treated recipients down-regulated CD127, consistent with breakthrough activation of these cells despite mTOR inhibition. Discussion: These results indicate that while the predominant effect of sirolimus during GvHD prophylaxis is its striking ability to inhibit T cell proliferation, sirolimus-based immunosuppression spares some cellular signaling pathways which control T cell activation. These results imply that therapies that are combined with sirolimus during multimodal GvHD prophylaxis should be directed at inhibiting T cell activation rather than proliferation, in order to target non-redundant pathways of alloimmune activation during GvHD control. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 144-144
Author(s):  
Mohammad S Hossain ◽  
David L Jaye ◽  
Brian P Pollack ◽  
Alton B Farr ◽  
John Roback ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 144 In MHC-mismatched allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT), host antigen specific donor T cells mediate acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). Based upon the radio-protective effects of flagellin, a TLR5 agonist protein (∼50 kDa) extracted from bacterial flagella, we reasoned that flagellin might modulate donor T cells immune responses toward host antigens, reduce GvHD, and improve immune responses to CMV infection in experimental models of allogeneic HSCT. Two 50mg/mouse i.p doses of highly purified flagellin were administered 3 hrs before irradiation and 24 hrs after allo-HSCT in H-2b ^ CB6F1 and H-2k ^ B6 models. GvHD scores were obtained with weekly clinical examination and with histological scoring of intestine, colon, liver and skin at necropsy. Flagellin treatment successfully protected allo-HSCT recipients from acute and chronic GvHDs after transplantation of 5×106 splenocytes and 5×106 T cell depleted (TCD) BM, and significantly increased survival compared to PBS-treated control recipients. Reduced acute GvHD was associated with significant reduction of a) early post-transplant proliferation of donor CD4+ and CD8+ T cells measured by Ki67 and CFSE staining, b) fewer CD62L+, CD69+, CD25+, ICOS-1+ and PD-1+ donor CD4+ and CD8+ T cells compared with the PBS-treated control recipients. Decreased numbers of activated and proliferating donor T cells were associated with significantly reduced pro-inflammatory serum IFN-g, TNF-a, and IL-6 on days 4–10 post transplant in flagellin-treated recipients compared with the PBS-treated recipients. Interestingly, both flagellin-treated recipients and PBS-treated recipients had over 99% donor T cell chimerism at 2 months post transplant. Moreover, MCMV infection on 100+ days post-transplant flagellin-treated mice significantly enhanced anti-viral immunity, including more donor MCMV-peptide-tetramer+ CD8+ T cells in the blood (p<0.05), and less MCMV in the liver on day 10 post infection (p<0.02) compared with the PBS-treated control recipients. Overall immune reconstitution after flagellin-treatment was robust and associated with larger numbers of CD4+CD25+foxp3+ regulatory T cells in the thymus. To further define the role of flagellin-TLR5 agonistic interactions in the reduction of GvHD, we next generated B6 ^ TLR5 KO (KO) and KOB^6 radiation chimeras by transplanting 10 × 106 BM cells from wild-type (WT) B6 or TLR5 KO donors into the congenic CD45.1+ B6 or KO recipients conditioned with 11Gy (5.5Gyx2) TBI. The radiation chimeras were irradiated again with 9.0Gy (4.5Gy × 2) on 60 days after the first transplant and transplanted with 3 × 106 splenocytes and 5 × 106 TCD BM from H-2K congenic donors. Two 50mg doses of flagellin were administered 3 hrs before irradiation and 24 hrs after HSCT. All flagellin-treated B6 ^ B6 radiation chimeras survived with only 12% weight-loss by 80 days post transplant compared with 50% survival among recipients of flagellin-treated B6 ^ KO and 40% survival among KO ^ B6 radiation chimeras. All flagellin-treated KO^ KO and PBS-treated radiation chimeras died within 65 days post transplant. These data suggested that interaction of flagellin with the TLR5 expressing host gut epithelium and donor hematopoietic cells are both required for the maximum protective effect of this TLR5 agonist on GvHD in allogeneic HSCT recipients. Together our data demonstrate that peritransplant administration of flagellin effectively controls acute and chronic GvHD while preserving enhanced post-transplant donor anti-opportunistic immunity. Since flagellin has been found to be safe for use in humans as vaccine adjuvant in a number of clinical trials, the clinical use of flagellin in the setting of allogeneic HSCT is of interest. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 4066-4066
Author(s):  
Brett Glotzbecker ◽  
Heidi Mills ◽  
Jacalyn Rosenblatt ◽  
Robin Joyce ◽  
James Levine ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4066 The fundamental challenge in designing an effective conditioning regimen for allogeneic transplantation involves the prevention of disease relapse while minimizing the risk for Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD). Treatment with total lymphocyte irradiation (TLI) and anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) has been shown to minimize the risk of GVHD through the biasing of the T cell reconstitution towards an inhibitory phenotype. However, disease relapse remains a significant concern. Clofarabine is a second generation nucleoside analog with potent cytoreductive capacity and demonstrates efficacy in hematological malignancies. In this study, we examined the combination of clofarabine, TLI and ATG with respect to T cell reconstitution, risk for GVHD and transplant outcome. Sequential cohorts of 5 patients were treated with TLI and ATG alone or in conjunction with 20 mg/m2, 30 mg/m2 or 40 mg/m2 of clofarabine for 5 days. Cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil were administered as GVHD prophylaxis. Twenty patients have been enrolled (5 AML/MDS, 2 ALL, 6 lymphoma, 2 CLL, 5 myeloma) and received HLA matched peripheral blood stem cells collected from related (N=11) and unrelated donors (N=9). Of 19 evaluable patients, 15 are alive with a median follow up of 665 days. Day 30 and 100 mortality was 0% for TLI and ATG and 0% and 10% for those receiving clofarabine. The maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of clofarabine was 30 mg/m2 as 2 patients experienced treatment related mortality at the 40 mg/m2 dose level. Grade 5 infections and multiorgan failure occurred in both patients. All patients demonstrated engraftment with mean bone marrow donor chimerism of 92.5% at Day 30. The first cohort's ANC did not drop below 500 cells/uL, while median time to neutrophil engraftment in the patients who received clofarabine was 9 days. The median time to platelet recovery was 11 and 12 days for patients receiving TLI and ATG alone or with clofarabine, respectively (p=0.39). T cell reconstitution studies demonstrated a significant decrease in CD4+ cells to (<200 cells/uL) persisting for more than 6 months and a more than a two fold increase in circulating CD56+ NK cells. No significant decrease in CD8 T cells in the early post-transplant period was seen in either group. The mean percentage of regulatory T cells (CD4+/25+/FoxP3+) rose in the early post-transplant period following TLI and ATG (5.5 to 14.2% from baseline to day 30; p=0.015), but not in those receiving clofarabine (8.1 to 6%; p=0.15). Assessment of T cell polarization at these time points demonstrated a two fold increase in CD8+ T cells expressing IL-4 at Day 30 in patients receiving TLI and ATG alone (p=0.04); but not following clofarabine containing conditioning. Consistent with these findings, the incidence of grade II-IV GVHD was 0% and 42% in those receiving TLI and ATG alone or in conjunction with clofarabine, respectively. cGVHD was seen in 20% and 42% of patients, respectively. In contrast, disease progression was seen in 60% of patients receiving TLI and ATG alone as compared to 27% receiving clofarabine, TLI, and ATG. In summary, the addition of clofarabine to TLI and ATG conditioning resulted in a decrease in circulating regulatory T cells, decreased CD8+ T cell expression of IL-4, and was associated with an increased risk of GVHD and a potential for a decrease in the risk of relapse. Disclosures: Chen: Genzyme: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Avigan:Genzyme: Research Funding.


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