| Literature DB >> 26449653 |
Thomas Köhnke1,2, Christina Krupka1,2, Johanna Tischer1, Thomas Knösel3, Marion Subklewe4,5.
Abstract
The bispecific T cell engager blinatumomab has shown encouraging clinical activity in B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, about half of relapsed/refractory patients do not respond to therapy. Here, we present the case of a 32-year-old male patient with refractory B-precursor ALL who was resistant to treatment with blinatumomab. Bone marrow immunohistochemistry revealed T cell infiltrates and an increase in programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1)-positive ALL cells as a potential immune escape mechanism. We were able to recapitulate the clinical observation in vitro by showing that blinatumomab was not able to mediate cytotoxicity of CD19-positive ALL cells using autologous T cells. In contrast, the addition of healthy donor T cells led to lysis of ALL cells.These results strongly encourage further systematic evaluation of checkpoint molecules in cases of blinatumomab treatment failure and might highlight a possible mechanism to overcome resistance to this otherwise highly effective treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26449653 PMCID: PMC4599591 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-015-0213-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Increase of PD-1 and PD-L1 positivity after treatment with blinatumomab. a CD19 vs. CD34 expression of lymphoblasts detected by flow cytometry. Lymphoblasts showed homogenous expression of CD19 at baseline (pre-treatment) as well as after blinatumomab treatment (post-treatment). b Lymphocyte counts on peripheral blood during blinatumomab treatment. Lymphocyte counts decreased during blinatumomab treatment (1596/μl on day 0, 986/μl on day 7, 464/μl on day 14, 368/μl on day 21, and 217/μl on day 28). c Hematoxylin and eosin stain of paraffin embedded bone marrow core biopsy showing diffuse infiltration of immature progenitors at both time points (pre-treatment blast count 30 %, post-treatment 60 %). d Immunohistochemistry of paraffin embedded bone marrow core biopsy stained for CD3 showing spotted infiltration of CD3-positive T cells at baseline (5–10 %, pre-treatment) and diffuse infiltration after blinatumomab treatment (20–30 %, post-treatment). e Immunohistochemistry of paraffin embedded bone marrow core biopsy stained for PD-1 showing 5 % PD-1-positive cells at baseline (pre-treatment) vs. 15 % after blinatumomab treatment (post-treatment). f Immunohistochemistry of paraffin embedded bone marrow core biopsy stained for PD-L1 showing 2 % PD-L1-positive blasts at baseline (pre-treatment) vs. 40 % after blinatumomab treatment (post-treatment)
Fig. 2Decreased in vitro blinatumomab-mediated lysis of ALL blasts by patient CD3-positive T cells. a PD-1 expression on peripheral CD3-positive T cells was compared to PD-1 expression on healthy donor CD3-positive T cells showing no detectable difference. b The patient’s ALL blasts were cocultured either with healthy donor CD3-positive T cells (upper panels) or the patient’s own CD3-positive T cells (lower panels) with either control-Bite® (left panels) or blinatumomab (right panels) and analyzed by flow cytometry after 3 days. c Specific lysis was calculated as one minus the ratio of CD19-positive cells treated with blinatumomab and CD19-positive cells treated with control-Bite®. Healthy donor CD3-positive T cells showed efficient lysis of our patient’s ALL blasts (specific lysis 93.6 %) whereas CD3-positive T cells from our patient showed inefficient lysis of autologous ALL blasts (specific lysis 8.5 %). d IFN-γ concentration in cell culture supernatants were considerably lower for our patient’s T cells cocultured with his ALL blasts, whereas coculture of healthy donor T cells and ALL blasts from our patient led to considerable IFN-γ production. Cell cultures with control-Bite® did not show any IFN-γ production