| Literature DB >> 29632722 |
Dang-Nghiem Vo1,2, Catherine Alexia1, Nerea Allende-Vega1,2, Franck Morschhauser3, Roch Houot4,5, Cedric Menard5,6, Karin Tarte5,6, Guillaume Cartron7,8, Martin Villalba1,2.
Abstract
Obinutuzumab (OBZ) shows stronger antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC) compared to rituximab and improved clinical activity for treating certain CD20+ neoplasia. However, the efficacy of monoclonal antibody (mAb) as a monotherapy is limited. Natural Killer (NK) cells are mediators of ADCC. Hematological cancer patients possess antitumor NK cells that are unable to control disease, possibly because they are dysfunctional. The immunomodulatory drug lenalidomide (LEN) could be a treatment to restore exhausted NK cell cytotoxic functions. The clinical trial GALEN is a Phase Ib/II study of OBZ combined with LEN for the treatment of relapsed/refractory follicular and aggressive (DLBCL and MCL) B-cell Lymphoma. During treatment, we analyzed specific aspects of NK cell biology. Treatment reversed the immature NK phenotype of patients and increased expression of NK activating receptors. Inhibitory receptors were either unchanged or decreased. There was a strong NK response at the end of the 1st cycle: NK number and intracellular granzyme B (GrzB) expression decreased, degranulation increased and NK responded better to allogeneic target challenge. Moreover, the interaction of NK cells with B cell targets, measured by trogocytosis, decreased during treatment. At the end of treatment, when target cells had been wiped out, the proportion of reactive NK cells (CD69+, CD45RARO+, CD107a+, CD19+) strongly decreased. Because all patients received LEN and OBZ, it was uncertain which drug was responsible of our observations, or even if a combination of both products was necessary for the described effects on this lymphocyte lineage.Entities:
Keywords: NK cell; diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL); follicular lymphoma (FL); lenalidomide; obinutuzumab
Year: 2017 PMID: 29632722 PMCID: PMC5889292 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2017.1409322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110