| Literature DB >> 30651320 |
Daniel L Barber1, Shunsuke Sakai2, Ragini R Kudchadkar3, Steven P Fling4,5, Tracey A Day6, Julie A Vergara6, David Ashkin7, Jonathan H Cheng8, Lisa M Lundgren5, Vanessa N Raabe9, Colleen S Kraft10, Jorge J Nieva8, Martin A Cheever4,5, Paul T Nghiem11, Elad Sharon12.
Abstract
Because of the well-established therapeutic benefit of boosting antitumor responses through blockade of the T cell inhibitory receptor PD-1, it has been proposed that PD-1 blockade could also be useful in infectious disease settings, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection. However, in preclinical models, Mtb-infected PD-1-/- mice mount exaggerated TH1 responses that drive lethal immunopathology. Multiple cases of tuberculosis during PD-1 blockade have been observed in patients with cancer, but in humans little is understood about Mtb-specific immune responses during checkpoint blockade-associated tuberculosis. Here, we report two more cases. We describe a patient who succumbed to disseminated tuberculosis after PD-1 blockade for treatment of nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and we examine Mtb-specific immune responses in a patient with Merkel cell carcinoma who developed checkpoint blockade-associated tuberculosis and was successfully treated for the infection. After anti-PD-1 administration, interferon-γ-producing Mtb-specific CD4 T cells became more prevalent in the blood, and a tuberculoma developed a few months thereafter. Mtb-specific TH17 cells, CD8 T cells, regulatory T cells, and antibody abundance did not change before the appearance of the granuloma. These results are consistent with the murine model data and suggest that boosting TH1 function with PD-1 blockade may increase the risk or severity of tuberculosis in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30651320 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aat2702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956