20 research outputs found
A Deficiency in the Autophagy Gene Atg16L1 Enhances Resistance to Enteric Bacterial Infection
SummaryPolymorphisms in the essential autophagy gene Atg16L1 have been linked with susceptibility to Crohn’s disease, a major type of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Although the inability to control intestinal bacteria is thought to underlie IBD, the role of Atg16L1 during extracellular intestinal bacterial infections has not been sufficiently examined and compared to the function of other IBD susceptibility genes, such as Nod2, which encodes a cytosolic bacterial sensor. We find that Atg16L1 mutant mice are resistant to intestinal disease induced by the model bacterial pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. An Atg16L1 deficiency alters the intestinal environment to mediate an enhanced immune response that is dependent on monocytic cells, but this hyperimmune phenotype and its protective effects are lost in Atg16L1/Nod2 double-mutant mice. These results reveal an immunosuppressive function of Atg16L1 and suggest that gene variants affecting the autophagy pathway may have been evolutionarily maintained to protect against certain life-threatening infections
Sotigalimab and/or nivolumab with chemotherapy in first-line metastatic pancreatic cancer: clinical and immunologic analyses from the randomized phase 2 PRINCE trial
Chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy has improved the treatment of certain solid tumors, but effective regimens remain elusive for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). We conducted a randomized phase 2 trial evaluating the efficacy of nivolumab (nivo; anti-PD-1) and/or sotigalimab (sotiga; CD40 agonistic antibody) with gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel (chemotherapy) in patients with first-line metastatic PDAC (NCT03214250). In 105 patients analyzed for efficacy, the primary endpoint of 1-year overall survival (OS) was met for nivo/chemo (57.7%, P = 0.006 compared to historical 1-year OS of 35%, n = 34) but was not met for sotiga/chemo (48.1%, P = 0.062, n = 36) or sotiga/nivo/chemo (41.3%, P = 0.223, n = 35). Secondary endpoints were progression-free survival, objective response rate, disease control rate, duration of response and safety. Treatment-related adverse event rates were similar across arms. Multi-omic circulating and tumor biomarker analyses identified distinct immune signatures associated with survival for nivo/chemo and sotiga/chemo. Survival after nivo/chemo correlated with a less suppressive tumor microenvironment and higher numbers of activated, antigen-experienced circulating T cells at baseline. Survival after sotiga/chemo correlated with greater intratumoral CD4 T cell infiltration and circulating differentiated CD4 T cells and antigen-presenting cells. A patient subset benefitting from sotiga/nivo/chemo was not identified. Collectively, these analyses suggest potential treatment-specific correlates of efficacy and may enable biomarker-selected patient populations in subsequent PDAC chemoimmunotherapy trials
Defining tumor resistance to PD-1 pathway blockade: recommendations from the first meeting of the SITC Immunotherapy Resistance Taskforce
As the field of cancer immunotherapy continues to advance at a fast pace, treatment approaches and drug development are evolving rapidly to maximize patient benefit. New agents are commonly evaluated for activity in patients who had previously received a programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1)/programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor as standard of care or in an investigational study. However, because of the kinetics and patterns of response to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade, and the lack of consistency in the clinical definitions of resistance to therapy, the design of clinical trials of new agents and interpretation of results remains an important challenge. To address this unmet need, the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer convened a multistakeholder taskforce—consisting of experts in cancer immunotherapy from academia, industry, and government—to generate consensus clinical definitions for resistance to PD-(L)1 inhibitors in three distinct scenarios: primary resistance, secondary resistance, and progression after treatment discontinuation. The taskforce generated consensus on several key issues such as the timeframes that delineate each type of resistance, the necessity for confirmatory scans, and identified caveats for each specific resistance classification. The goal of this effort is to provide guidance for clinical trial design and to support analyses of emerging molecular and cellular data surrounding mechanisms of resistance
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Phase I/II study to evaluate systemic durvalumab + intraperitoneal (IP) ONCOS-102 in patients with peritoneal disease who have epithelial ovarian (OC) or metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC): Interim phase I clinical and translational results
3017 Background: Metastasis to the peritoneal cavity is associated with end-stage disease in many cancers, including OC and CRC, both of which exhibit poor responses to checkpoint inhibitors. Locoregional treatment with oncolytic viruses may be used to improve the efficacy of checkpoint inhibitors at both treated and distant tumor sites. This study evaluates the combination of IP-administered ONCOS-102, an oncolytic adenovirus encoding for granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (GMCSF), with systemic durvalumab, an anti PD-L1 antibody, in patients with peritoneal disease who have histologically confirmed OC or metastatic CRC and have failed prior standard therapies. Methods: This ongoing Phase 1/2, open-label study (NCT02963831) evaluates safety and antitumor/biologic activity of durvalumab (1500 mg IV, every 4 weeks x 12) + ONCOS-102 (IP, weekly x 6); cyclophosphamide is given pre first ONCOS-102 dose. Phase 1 uses a 3+3 design to evaluate the ONCOS-102 dose (1 or 3 x 1011 VP) to be given with durvalumab. Phase 2 evaluates the activity of the combination using Simon’s 2-stage MINIMAX design. Safety, response rate by RECIST 1.1, and immunological effects in tumors were evaluated for Phase 1; the current abstract reports on the phase 1 results. Results: Enrollment opened 7 Sep 2017; data cutoff, 1 Nov 2019. There were 17 patients treated in Phase 1: 8 CRC, 9 ovarian; 94% female; median age, 56 [37-77] years; ECOG PS0, 47%; ECOG PS1, 53%. There were no DLTs. Grade 3 treatment-related AEs included hypokalemia (n = 2); anemia, myocarditis, increased GGT, and influenza like illness (n = 1 each). There were 4 deaths due to PD. One patient had durable confirmed partial response and remains on treatment > 1 year; 4 patients had stable disease as best overall response. Two patients remained on treatment at data cutoff. Analysis of pre- and on-treatment tumor biopsies revealed changes in the tumor-infiltrating immune cells and PD-L1 expression, including an increase in tumor-infiltrating CD8 T cells in 5 of 11 evaluable patients. Conclusions: Combination of durvalumab and IP ONCOS-102 was safe, and no DLTs were observed. Preliminary analyses demonstrate evidence of biologic and clinical activity. Phase 2 enrollment is ongoing. Clinical trial information: NCT02963831
Hallmarks of Resistance to Immune-Checkpoint InhibitorsHallmarks of Resistance to Immune-Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), although revolutionary in improving long-term survival outcomes, are mostly effective in patients with immune-responsive tumors. Most patients with cancer either do not respond to ICIs at all or experience disease progression after an initial period of response. Treatment resistance to ICIs remains a major challenge and defines the biggest unmet medical need in oncology worldwide. In a collaborative workshop, thought leaders from academic, biopharma, and nonprofit sectors convened to outline a resistance framework to support and guide future immune-resistance research. Here, we explore the initial part of our effort by collating seminal discoveries through the lens of known biological processes. We highlight eight biological processes and refer to them as immune resistance nodes. We examine the seminal discoveries that define each immune resistance node and pose critical questions, which, if answered, would greatly expand our notion of immune resistance. Ultimately, the expansion and application of this work calls for the integration of multiomic high-dimensional analyses from patient-level data to produce a map of resistance phenotypes that can be utilized to guide effective drug development and improved patient outcomes
CD40 agonistic monoclonal antibody APX005M (sotigalimab) and chemotherapy, with or without nivolumab, for the treatment of metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma: an open-label, multicentre, phase 1b study
Background Standard chemotherapy remains inadequate in metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Combining an agonistic CD40 monoclonal antibody with chemotherapy induces T-cell-dependent tumour regression in mice and improves survival. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the safety of combining APX005M (sotigalimab) with gemcitabine plus nab-paclitaxel, with and without nivolumab, in patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma to establish the recommended phase 2 dose.Methods This non-randomised, open-label, multicentre, four-cohort, phase 1b study was done at seven academic hospitals in the USA. Eligible patients were adults aged 18 years and older with untreated metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score of 0-1, and measurable disease by Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1. All patients were treated with 1000 mg/m(2) intravenous gemcitabine and 125 mg/m(2) intravenous nab-paclitaxel. Patients received 0.1 mg/kg intravenous APX005M in cohorts B1 and Cl and 0.3 mg/kg in cohorts B2 and C2. In cohorts Cl and C2, patients also received 240 mg intravenous nivolumab. Primary endpoints comprised incidence of adverse events in all patients who received at least one dose of any study drug, incidence of dose-limiting toxicities (DITs) in all patients who had a DLT or received at least two doses of gemcitabine plus nab-paclitaxel and one dose of APX005M during cycle 1, and establishing the recommended phase 2 dose of intravenous APX005M. Objective response rate in the DLT-evaluable population was a key secondary endpoint. This trial (PRINCE, PICI0002) is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03214250 and is ongoing.Findings Between Aug 22, 2017, and July 10, 2018, of 42 patients screened, 30 patients were enrolled and received at least one dose of any study drug; 24 were DLT-evaluable with median follow-up 17.8 months (IQR 16.0-19.4; cohort B1 22.0 months [21.4-22.7], cohort B2 18.2 months [17.0-18.9], cohort C1 17.9 months [14.3-19.7], cohort C2 15.9 months 112.7-16.11). Two DLTs, both febrile neutropenia, were observed, occurring in one patient each for cohorts B2 (grade 3) and C1 (grade 4). The most common grade 3-4 treatment-related adverse events were lymphocyte count decreased (20 [67%]; five in B1, seven in B2, four in C1, four in C2), anaemia (11 [37%]; two in B1, four in B2, four in C1, one in C2), and neutrophil count decreased (nine [30%]; three in B1, three in B2, one in C1, two in C2). 14 (47%) of 30 patients (four each in Bi, B2, C1; two in C2) had a treatment-related serious adverse event. The most common serious adverse event was pyrexia (six [20%[ of 30; one in B2, three in C1, two in C2). There were two chemotherapy-related deaths due to adverse events: one sepsis in B1 and one septic shock in Cl. The recommended phase 2 dose of APX005M was 0.3 mg/kg. Responses were observed in 14 (58%) of 24 DLT-evaluable patients (four each in B1, C1, C2; two in B2).Interpretation APX005M and gemcitabine plus nab-paditaxel, with or without nivolumab, is tolerable in metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma and shows clinical activity. If confirmed in later phase trials, this treatment regimen could replace chemotherapy-only standard of care in this population. Copyright (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Irradiation results in a short-lived enhancement of dendritic cell numbers and phenotype, corresponding to a similarly short-lived enhanced response to tumor vaccination.
<p>A) Mice were treated with irradiation and lymphocyte infusion, and splenic dendritic cell (DC) (CD11c<sup>+</sup>MHCII<sup>+</sup>) percentages and CD86 expression were quantified by flow cytometry. B) Examination of inguinal lymph nodes (LN) for the percentages and relative ratios of skin-derived DCs (CD11c<sup>+</sup>MHCII<sup>high</sup>) and LN-resident DCs (CD11c<sup>+</sup>MHCII<sup>intermediate</sup>) was also evaluated by flow cytometry. Results shown from one of two experiments with similar results. C) Mice were treated with radiation and lymphocyte infusion, and were then immunized with hTRP2 DNA vaccine starting 1, 3, or 7 days afterwards. After 3 immunizations, splenocytes were restimulated with TRP2<sub>181-188</sub> peptide or irradiated B16 cells, and IFNγ production from CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells was quantified by flow cytometry. n=3/group, results shown from one of two experiments with similar results. D) Mice were treated as in A with varying days of initial hTRP2 DNA immunizations, and then were challenged intradermally with B16 melanoma. Mice were then monitored for development of palpable tumors. n=7-12/group, results shown from one of two experiments with similar results.</p
Irradiation followed by lymphocyte infusion leads to marked T cell populations and increased frequency of IFNy+ tumor-antigen specific CD8+ T cells.
<p>A) CD3, CD4 and CD8-expressing splenocytes were quantified by flow cytometry at the indicated time points following irradiation and lymphocyte infusion. Typical numbers from normal mice are indicated by the dotted line. Results shown from one of two experiments with similar results. B) Regulatory T cell splenocytes (CD3<sup>+</sup>CD4<sup>+</sup>Foxp3<sup>+</sup>) and the CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell to regulatory T cell ratio were quantified by flow cytometry. Expression of IL-15Rα and CD122 on tetramer<sup>+</sup> CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells was also quantified by flow cytometry. Results shown from one of two experiments with similar results. C) Mice were irradiated, received an infusion of 30×10<sup>6</sup> splenocytes from naïve Pmel mice, which express a CD8<sup>+</sup> TCR transgene recognizing the melanoma antigen gp100, and immunized weekly with hgp100 DNA plasmid vaccine for 3 doses. Naive Pmel splenocytes, and splenocytes isolated 20 days after infusion into irradiated animals +/- vaccination were restimulated with gp100<sub>25-33</sub> peptide (1μg/ml) and evaluated for staining with Pmel-specific tetramer and expression of IFNγ by flow cytometry.</p