| Literature DB >> 30017877 |
João Manuel Santos1, Víctor Cervera-Carrascon1, Riikka Havunen1, Sadia Zafar2, Mikko Siurala1, Suvi Sorsa1, Marjukka Anttila3, Anna Kanerva4, Akseli Hemminki5.
Abstract
Lymphodepleting preconditioning with high-dose chemotherapy is commonly used to increase the clinical efficacy of adoptive T cell therapy (ACT) strategies, however, with severe toxicity for patients. Conversely, oncolytic adenoviruses are safe and, when engineered to express interleukin-2 (IL-2) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), they can achieve antitumor immunomodulatory effects similar to lymphodepletion. Therefore, we compare the safety and efficacy of such adenoviruses with a cyclophosphamide- and fludarabine-containing lymphodepleting regimen in the setting of ACT. Human adenovirus (Ad5/3-E2F-D24-hTNF-α-IRES-hIL-2; TILT-123) replication was studied using a Syrian hamster pancreatic tumor model (HapT1) infused with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). Using the oncolytic virus instead of lymphodepletion resulted in superior efficacy and survival. Immune cells responsive to TNF-α IL-2 were studied using an immunocompetent mouse melanoma model (B16.OVA) infused with ovalbumin-specific T (OT-I) cells. Here, the adenovirus approach improved tumor control together with increased intratumoral Th1 cytokine levels and infiltration of CD8+ T cells and CD86+ dendritic cells. Similar to humans, lymphodepleting preconditioning caused severe cytopenias, systemic inflammation, and damage to vital organs. Toxicity was minimal in adenovirus- and OT-I-treated mice. These findings demonstrate that ACT can be effectively facilitated by cytokine-coding adenovirus without requiring lymphodepletion, a rationale being clinically investigated.Entities:
Keywords: TCR modified T cell therapy; TIL therapy; adoptive T cell therapy; chemotherapy; interleukin-2; lymphodepleting preconditioning; oncolytic adenovirus; tumor necrosis factor alpha
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30017877 PMCID: PMC6127851 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2018.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther ISSN: 1525-0016 Impact factor: 11.454