SAP is an adaptor protein expressed in T cells and natural killer cells. It plays a critical role in immunity, as it is mutated in humans with X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome (XLP), a fatal immunodeficiency characterized by an abnormal response to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. SAP interacts with the SLAM family receptors and promotes transduction signal events by these receptors through its capacity to recruit and activate the Src kinase FynT. Because it has been previously established that FynT is selectively required for the development of NKT cells, we examined NKT cells in SAP-deficient mice and in humans with XLP. In the absence of SAP, the development of NKT cells is severely impaired both in mice and in humans. These results imply that SAP is a potent regulator of NKT cell development. They also identify for the first time a defect in NKT cells associated with a human primary immunodeficiency, revealing a potential role of NKT cells in the immune response to EBV.
Objective. Anti-signal recognition particle (anti-SRP) autoantibodies are associated with severe acquired necrotizing myopathies. The role of these autoantibodies remains elusive, and the evolution of anti-SRP levels over time is unknown. In this study, we developed an addressable laser bead immunoassay (ALBIA) technique to investigate a correlation between anti-SRP levels, serum creatine kinase (CK) levels, and muscle strength in patients with necrotizing myopathy.Methods. The diagnostic value of the ALBIA assay was determined by comparing serum levels of anti-SRP autoantibodies in 31 anti-SRP immunodotpositive patients to those in 190 healthy blood donors and 199 control patients with different inflammatory/ autoimmune conditions or polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. Among the 31 anti-SRP-positive patients, serum samples from 8 patients were monitored over time for levels of anti-SRP autoantibodies and levels of CK (determined at least 3 times, consecutively, over a mean followup period of 783 days). The relationship between levels of anti-SRP autoantibodies and levels of CK was tested using a linear mixed model.Results. The assay yielded positive results for anti-SRP in all anti-SRP immunodot-positive serum samples tested, while all control sera tested negative. The 8 anti-SRP-positive patients who were followed up longitudinally were found to have normalized CK levels and improved muscle strength. There was a striking correlation between the degree of myolysis, as measured by CK levels, in patients receiving therapy and the anti-SRP54 autoantibody levels in these same patients (P ؍ 0.002).Conclusion. Anti-SRP-positive myositis appears to be one of the few autoimmune diseases in which specific autoantibody levels are correlated with surrogate disease activity markers. These results reveal the usefulness of monitoring anti-SRP autoantibody levels in patients receiving therapy, and may also suggest a possible pathogenic role for anti-SRP autoantibodies in the necrotizing myopathies.Autoantibodies directed against signal recognition particles (anti-SRP) are present in a minority (4-6%) of patients with acquired inflammatory and/or necrotizing myopathies (1-5). Anti-SRP autoantibodies are generally associated with severe clinical forms of the disease, particularly those with heart and lung involvement (6,7) and resistance to steroid therapy (8-10).
PURPOSE To evaluate first-line pembrolizumab monotherapy efficacy and safety in patients with unresectable cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (CSCCs). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients, predominantly men, with their CSSCs’ immunohistochemically determined programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) status determined (tumor proportion score threshold, 1%), received pembrolizumab (200 mg every 3 weeks). The primary endpoint was the 39-patient primary cohort’s objective response rate at week 15 (ORRW15). Secondary objectives were best ORR, overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), duration of response (DOR), safety, ORR according to PD-L1 status and health-related quality of life using Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–General (FACT-G) score. An 18-patient expansion cohort, recruited to power the study to evaluate the ORRW15 difference between PD-L1+ and PD-L1– patients, was assessed for ORR, disease control rate, and safety, but not survival. RESULTS Median age of all patients was 79 years. The primary cohort’s ORRW15 was 41% (95% CI, 26% to 58%), including 13 partial and 3 complete responses. Best responses were 8 partial and 8 complete responses. At a median follow-up of 22.4 months, respective median PFS, DOR, and OS were 6.7 months, not reached, and 25.3 months, respectively. Pembrolizumab-related adverse events affected 71% of the patients, and 4 (7%) were grade ≥ 3. One death was related to rapid CSCC progression; another resulted from a fatal second aggressive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma diagnosed 15 weeks postinclusion. ORRW15 for the entire population was 42%; it was significantly higher for PD-L1+ patients (55%) versus PD-L1– patients (17%; P = .02). Responders’ W15 total FACT-G score had improved ( P = .025) compared with nonresponders. CONCLUSION First-line pembrolizumab monotherapy exhibited promising anti-CSCC activity, with durable responses and manageable safety. PD-L1 positivity appears to be predictive of pembrolizumab efficacy.
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