| Literature DB >> 26668134 |
Bruno Paiva1, María Victoria Mateos2, Luis Ignacio Sanchez-Abarca2, Noemi Puig2, María-Belén Vidriales2, Lucía López-Corral2, Luis A Corchete2, Miguel T Hernandez3, Joan Bargay4, Felipe de Arriba5, Javier de la Rubia6, Ana-Isabel Teruel7, Pilar Giraldo8, Laura Rosiñol9, Felipe Prosper1, Albert Oriol10, José Hernández11, Graça Esteves12, Juan José Lahuerta13, Joan Bladé9, Jose Antonio Perez-Simon14, Jesús F San Miguel1.
Abstract
There is significant interest in immunotherapy for the treatment of high-risk smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM), but no available data on the immune status of this particular disease stage. Such information is important to understand the interplay between immunosurveillance and disease transformation, but also to define whether patients with high-risk SMM might benefit from immunotherapy. Here, we have characterized T lymphocytes (including CD4, CD8, T-cell receptor γδ, and regulatory T cells), natural killer (NK) cells, and dendritic cells from 31 high-risk SMM patients included in the treatment arm of the QUIREDEX trial, and with longitudinal peripheral blood samples at baseline and after 3 and 9 cycles of lenalidomide plus low-dose dexamethasone (LenDex). High-risk SMM patients showed at baseline decreased expression of activation-(CD25/CD28/CD54), type 1 T helper-(CD195/interferon-γ/tumor necrosis factor-α/interleukin-2), and proliferation-related markers (CD119/CD120b) as compared with age-matched healthy individuals. However, LenDex was able to restore the normal expression levels for those markers and induced a marked shift in T-lymphocyte and NK-cell phenotype. Accordingly, high-risk SMM patients treated with LenDex showed higher numbers of functionally active T lymphocytes. Together, our results indicate that high-risk SMM patients have an impaired immune system that could be reactivated by the immunomodulatory effects of lenalidomide, even when combined with low-dose dexamethasone, and support the value of therapeutic immunomodulation to delay the progression to multiple myeloma. The QUIREDEX trial was registered to www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00480363.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26668134 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2015-10-662320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113