Debate is around the optimal immunization regimen for cancer vaccines since too intense vaccination schedules may exhaust reactive lymphocytes. GX301 is a telomerase-based cancer vaccine whose safety and immunological effects were tested in a phase I trial applying an eight administrations schedule. Main objective of this study was to comparatively analyse safety and immunological response to three GX301 regimens in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients with response/disease stability after docetaxel chemotherapy. This was a multicentre, randomized, parallel-group, open-label trial registered with EudraCT (2014-000095-26) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02293707, 2014). Ninety-eight patients were randomized to receive either eight (regimen 1), four (regimen 2) or two (regimen 3) vaccine administrations. Sixty-three patients were assessable for the primary immunological end-point. Vaccine-specific immune responses were evaluated by intracellular staining for IFN, elispot and cytotoxic assay at 90 and 180 days from baseline. No major side effects were recorded. A 54% overall immune responder rate was observed with 95% of patients showing at least one vaccine-specific immune response. Rate of immunological responders and number of immunizations were proportionally related, suggesting superiority of regimens 1 and 2 over regimen 3. Overall survival did not differ among regimens in both immunological responders and non-responders and was inversely associated (P = 0.002) with increase in the number of circulating CD8 + T regulatory cells at 180 days. These data indicate that GX301 cancer vaccine is safe and immunogenic in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients. Schedules with high number of administrations should be preferred in future studies due to their better immunological outcome.
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has a poor clinical outcome despite the presence of a rich CD8+ T cell tumor infiltrate in the majority of patients. This may be due to alterations of tumor infiltrating CD8+ T cells. Here, we performed a characterization of HNSCC infiltrating CD8+ T cells in a cohort of 30 patients. The results showed that differential intratumoral frequency of CD8+CD28+ T cells, CD8+CD28- T cells, and CD8+CD28-CD127-CD39+ Treg distinguished between HNSCC patients who did or did not respond to treatment. Moreover, high PD1 expression identified a CD8+CD28- T cell subpopulation, phenotypically/functionally corresponding to CD8+CD28-CD127-CD39+ Treg, which showed a high expression of markers of exhaustion. This observation suggests that development of exhaustion and acquisition of regulatory properties may configure the late differentiation stage for intratumoral effector T cells, a phenomenon we define as effector-to-regulatory T cell transition.
Introduction: Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCLs) include heterogeneous entities of rare and aggressive neoplasms. The improved understanding of the biological/molecular mechanisms driving T-cell transformation and tumor maintenance has powerfully propelled new therapeutic programs. However, despite this progress, PTCLs remain an unmet medical need. Recurrent aberrations and the deregulated activation of distinct signaling pathways have been mapped and linked to selective subtypes. The JAK/STAT signaling pathway's deregulated activation plays a pathogenetic role in PTCL, including ALCL subtypes. STATs regulate the differentiation/phenotype, survival and cell-growth, metabolism, and drug resistance of T-cell lymphomas as well as host immunosuppressive microenvironments. Although many drugs' discovery programs were launched, a plethora of compounds has failed. Methods: We have discovered heterobifunctional molecules by an iterative medicinal chemistry SAR campaign that potently and selectively degrade STAT3 in a proteasome-dependent manner. Conventional PTCL cell lines and Patient Derived Tumor Xenograft (PDTX) and/or derived cell lines (PDTX-CL), carrying either WT- or mutated-STAT3, were exposed to increasing amounts (50nM⇒5µM) of STAT3-degraders. Proteins and mRNA transcripts (2⇒144hrs) were assessed by deep-proteomics and paired-end RNA sequencing, combined with WB/flow cytometry and qRT-PCR. Cell-titer-glo, cell titer blue, Annexin-V and S-cell cycle analyses were used as readouts. Chromatin accessibility, STAT3 DNA binding, 3D chromosomal architecture reorganization and 5-hmC profiling were assessed by ATACseq, CHIPseq and Hi-C and H3K27ac Hi-CHIP and mass-spectrometry. Drug testing/discovery combinations (96-well-plate) were performed using a semi-automated flow-cytometry. A battery of PTCL PDTX models were tested in pre-clinical trials. Results: Treatment of ALK+ ALCL (SU-DHL1) led to the rapid (~6hrs.) and profound down-regulation of STAT3 followed by the loss of canonical STAT3-regulated proteins (SOCS3, MYC, Granzyme B, GAS1, and IL2RA), without appreciable changes for other STAT family members (STAT1, STAT5b). In vitro, cytoplasmic, nuclear, and mitochondrial STAT3 downregulation was maintained up to 144 hrs. Loss of STAT3 in ALK+/- ALCL and BIA-ALCL cells was associated with major transcriptional changes (7116-10615 and 15114 DEGs in ALK- and ALK+ ALCL, respectively), underscoring public/shared as well as private time-dependent signatures. Main down-regulated pathways included JAK-STAT, MAPK, NF-kB, PI3K, TGFb, and TNFa. Comparison of STAT3 shRNA (ALK+ ALCL) and STAT3 degrader (ALK-/ALK+ ALCL) signatures demonstrated a substantial and concordant gene modulation (24hrs) among all models with the highest overlaps between ALK+ ALCL (Figure 3). To identify direct STAT3 gene targets, we analyzed CHIPseq peaks and predicted bindings sites, demonstrating that canonical genes, i.e., SOCS3, Granzyme B, GAS1, IL2RA, STAT3, and CD30, were significantly downregulated. Conversely, CD58, CD274, and MCH-I/II were upregulated at late time points. By mapping the STAT3 binding sites in ALK+ and ALK- ALCL, we have identified 1077 and 2763 STAT3 peaks within promoter/5'-/3'- and distant intergenic regions, corresponding to both coding and non-coding genes. Therapeutically, in vitro treatments led to cell cycle arrest and profound growth inhibition, and over time increased cell death of PTCL cells, including ALCL. Accordingly, growth inhibition of ALCL xenograft and PDTX tumors was also achieved (Figure 2). To identify drugs that could synergize withSTAT3-degrader activity, we tested a compound library (40) targeting pro-tumorigenic PTCL pathways as well as FDA-approved compounds. Ongoing studies are in progress. Conclusion: We have discovered selective STAT3 degraders which control PTCL growth. STAT3 degraders are powerful tools to define the STAT3 pathogenetic mechanisms and dissect genes/pathways to be targeted for T-cell lymphoma eradication. These data provide additional rationale for testing STAT3 degraders in the clinic for the treatment of aggressive malignancies including PTCL/ALCL. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Yang: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Sharma: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Dey: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Karnik: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Elemento: Owkin: Consultancy, Other: Current equity holder; Volastra Therapeutics: Consultancy, Other: Current equity holder, Research Funding; Johnson and Johnson: Research Funding; Eli Lilly: Research Funding; Janssen: Research Funding; Champions Oncology: Consultancy; Freenome: Consultancy, Other: Current equity holder in a privately-held company; One Three Biotech: Consultancy, Other: Current equity holder; AstraZeneca: Research Funding. Horwitz: Affimed: Research Funding; Aileron: Research Funding; ADC Therapeutics, Affimed, Aileron, Celgene, Daiichi Sankyo, Forty Seven, Inc., Kyowa Hakko Kirin, Millennium /Takeda, Seattle Genetics, Trillium Therapeutics, and Verastem/SecuraBio.: Consultancy, Research Funding; Acrotech Biopharma, Affimed, ADC Therapeutics, Astex, Merck, Portola Pharma, C4 Therapeutics, Celgene, Janssen, Kura Oncology, Kyowa Hakko Kirin, Myeloid Therapeutics, ONO Pharmaceuticals, Seattle Genetics, Shoreline Biosciences, Inc, Takeda, Trillium Th: Consultancy; Celgene: Research Funding; C4 Therapeutics: Consultancy; Crispr Therapeutics: Research Funding; Daiichi Sankyo: Research Funding; Forty Seven, Inc.: Research Funding; Kura Oncology: Consultancy; Kyowa Hakko Kirin: Consultancy, Research Funding; Millennium/Takeda: Research Funding; Myeloid Therapeutics: Consultancy; ONO Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy; Seattle Genetics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Secura Bio: Consultancy; Shoreline Biosciences, Inc.: Consultancy; Takeda: Consultancy; Trillium Therapeutics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Tubulis: Consultancy; Verastem/Securabio: Research Funding. DeSavi: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company. Liu: Kymera Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company.
Introduction: Immunotherapy is a promising therapeutic intervention for cancer treatment. Activation of the immune system via checkpoint blockade has been shown to produce antitumor responses in patients with both solid and hematological tumors. However, many patients do not respond to checkpoint inhibitors, and additional therapies are needed to treat these patients. Testing immunotherapies requires a functional human immune system; thus, it is difficult to evaluate their effectiveness using conventional experimental models. For this reason, establishing in vivo models that closely reproduce not only human tumors, but also their interactions with the human immune system, has become mandatory. Methods: We developed a humanized mouse model and combined it with a patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDTX). Humanized mice (HuMice) were generated by transplantation of cord blood or mobilized peripheral blood CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells into preconditioned immunodeficient mice. We compared human engraftment in 3 different mouse strains: NSG (NOD.Cg-Prkdc scidIl2rg tm1Wjl/SzJ), NSGS (NOD.Cg-Prkdc scidIl2rg tm1Wjl Tg(CMV-IL3,CSF2,KITLG)1Eav/MloySzJ) and NBSGW (NOD.Cg-Kit W-41J Tyr + Prkdc scid Il2rg tm1Wjl/ThomJ). Immune cell profiling and distribution was performed using flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. The B cell receptor (BCR) repertoire was evaluated using an RNA-based NGS assay. To evaluate the maturation and functionality of T cells developing in HuMice we performed proliferation, degranulation and intracellular cytokine staining. Results: Two months after CD34+ cell transplantation, we observed high levels of human hematopoietic chimerism in all the 3 strains. NSGS mice supported high-level chimerism as early as 1 month after transplantation, with more than 25% of human CD45+ cells in the blood. In all mice the majority of human circulating leukocytes were CD19+ B cells. An early appearance of CD3+ human T cells was detected in NSGS mice as compared to the other strains. Notably, the T cell expansion correlated with a decrease in relative B cell abundance while the myeloid cell contribution to the graft remained steady. We documented the differentiation of CD4+ and CD8+ human T cells at a 2:1 ratio. The characterization of the T cell subsets revealed that the majority was represented by CD45RA-CCR7- effector memory cells in both the spleen and the blood of HuMice. Nevertheless, recipient mice did not exhibit overt signs of graft-versus-host disease. We also evaluated the cytotoxic potential of T cells isolated from the spleen of HuMice: ex vivo peptide antigen (i.e. EBV) presentation let to generation of effective and specific cytotoxic T-cells. After assessing a functional human immune system reconstitution in HuMice, we challenged them in vivo with low-passage tumor fragments from a diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) PDTX. All tumor implants were successfully engrafted in both HuMice and non-humanized controls. Remarkably, all the 3 HuMice strains showed a significant reduction in the tumor volume and/or eradication compared to matched non-humanized controls. Flow cytometry analysis of the peripheral blood of humanized PDTX revealed that the tumor engraftment elicited a significant expansion of CD3+ T cells and cytotoxic CD8+ lymphocytes. Moreover, tumors developing in HuMice exhibited intermediate to high levels of tumor infiltrating T lymphocytes commingling with the neoplastic B cells, as determined by immunohistochemistry. Large areas of necrosis were often observed in PDTX of HuMice. Infiltrating CD3+ cells were TIGIT, PD-1 and Lag-3 positive, and did not efficiently proliferate ex vivo: all features consistent with an exhaustion phenotype. PDTX of HuMice often displayed larger areas of necrosis. Conclusions: Collectively, our data demonstrate that a robust reconstitution can be achieved in different strains of immunocompromised mice and that HuMice elicit effective anti-lymphoma responses. PDTX HuMice represent a powerful platform to study host-tumor interactions, and to test novel immune-based strategies (CAR-T, bifunctional Abs) and new pharmacological approaches to counteract T-cell exhaustion. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Scandura: Abbvie: Consultancy, Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Constellation: Research Funding; MPN-RF (Foundation): Research Funding; CR&T (Foudation): Research Funding; European Leukemia net: Honoraria, Other: travel fees . Roth: Janssen: Consultancy; Merck: Consultancy.
BackgroundThe current challenge for immunotherapies is to generate effective antitumor immunity. Since tumor immune escape mechanisms do not impact pre-existing and consolidated immune responses, we tested the hypothesis of redirecting a pregenerated immunity to cancer: to recall a non-tumor antigen response against the tumor, silk fibroin nanoparticles (SFNs) have been selected as ‘Trojan-horse’ carriers, promoting the antigen uptake by the tumor cells.MethodsSFNs have been loaded with either ovalbumin (OVA) or CpG oligonucleotide (CpG) as antigen or adjuvant, respectively. In vitro uptake of SFNs by tumor (B16/F10 melanoma and MB49 bladder cancer) or dendritic cells, as well as the presence of OVA-specific T cells in splenic and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, were assessed by cytometric analyses. Proof-of-concept of in vivo efficacy was achieved in an OVA-hyperimmune B16/F10 murine melanoma model: SFNs-OVA or SFNs-CpG were injected, separately or in association, into the subcutaneous peritumoral area. Cancer dimensions/survival time were monitored, while, at the molecular level, system biology approaches based on graph theory and experimental proteomic data were performed.ResultsSFNs were efficiently in vitro uptaken by cancer and dendritic cells. In vivo peritumor administration of SFNs-OVA redirected OVA-specific cytotoxic T cells intratumorally. Proteomics and systems biology showed that peritumoral treatment with either SFNs-OVA or SFNs-CpG dramatically modified tumor microenvironment with respect to the control (CTR), mainly involving functional modules and hubs related to angiogenesis, inflammatory mediators, immune function, T complex and serpins expression, redox homeostasis, and energetic metabolism. Both SFNs-OVA and SFNs-CpG significantly delayed melanoma growth/survival time, and their effect was additive.ConclusionsBoth SFNs-OVA and SFNs-CpG induce effective anticancer response through complementary mechanisms and show the efficacy of an innovative active immunotherapy approach based on the redirection of pre-existing immunity against cancer cells. This approach could be universally applied for solid cancer treatments if translated into the clinic using re-call antigens of childhood vaccination.
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