| Literature DB >> 30747243 |
Linh T Nguyen1, Samuel D Saibil2, Valentin Sotov1, Michael X Le1, Leila Khoja2, Danny Ghazarian3, Luisa Bonilla2, Habeeb Majeed2, David Hogg2, Anthony M Joshua2,4, Michael Crump2, Norman Franke2, Anna Spreafico2, Aaron Hansen2, Ayman Al-Habeeb3, Wey Leong5, Alexandra Easson5, Michael Reedijk5, David P Goldstein5,6, David McCready5, Kazuhiro Yasufuku5, Thomas Waddell5, Marcelo Cypel5, Andrew Pierre5, Bianzheng Zhang2, Sarah Boross-Harmer1, Jane Cipollone1, Megan Nelles1, Elizabeth Scheid1, Michael Fyrsta1, Charlotte S Lo1, Jessica Nie1, Jennifer Y Yam1, Pei Hua Yen1, Diana Gray1, Vinicius Motta1, Alisha R Elford1, Stephanie DeLuca7, Lisa Wang8, Stephanie Effendi8, Ragitha Ellenchery8, Naoto Hirano1,9, Pamela S Ohashi1,9, Marcus O Butler10,11,12,13.
Abstract
Adoptive cell therapy using autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) has shown significant clinical benefit, but is limited by toxicities due to a requirement for post-infusion interleukin-2 (IL-2), for which high dose is standard. To assess a modified TIL protocol using lower dose IL-2, we performed a single institution phase II protocol in unresectable, metastatic melanoma. The primary endpoint was response rate. Secondary endpoints were safety and assessment of immune correlates following TIL infusion. Twelve metastatic melanoma patients were treated with non-myeloablative lymphodepleting chemotherapy, TIL, and low-dose subcutaneous IL-2 (125,000 IU/kg/day, maximum 9-10 doses over 2 weeks). All but one patient had previously progressed after treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors. No unexpected adverse events were observed, and patients received an average of 6.8 doses of IL-2. By RECIST v1.1, two patients experienced a partial response, one patient had an unconfirmed partial response, and six had stable disease. Biomarker assessment confirmed an increase in IL-15 levels following lymphodepleting chemotherapy as expected and a lack of peripheral regulatory T-cell expansion following protocol treatment. Interrogation of the TIL infusion product and monitoring of the peripheral blood following infusion suggested engraftment of TIL. In one responding patient, a population of T cells expressing a T-cell receptor Vβ chain that was dominant in the infusion product was present at a high percentage in peripheral blood more than 2 years after TIL infusion. This study shows that this protocol of low-dose IL-2 following adoptive cell transfer of TIL is feasible and clinically active. (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01883323.).Entities:
Keywords: Adoptive cell therapy; Clinical trial; Interleukin-2; Metastatic melanoma; Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30747243 DOI: 10.1007/s00262-019-02307-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother ISSN: 0340-7004 Impact factor: 6.968