| Literature DB >> 32457357 |
Tineke Casneuf1, Homer C Adams2, Niels W C J van de Donk3, Yann Abraham4, Jaime Bald2, Greet Vanhoof4, Koen Van der Borght4, Tina Smets4, Brad Foulk2, Karl C Nielsen2, Joshua Rusbuldt2, Amy Axel2, Andrew Lysaght5, Hugo Ceulemans4, Frederik Stevenaert4, Saad Z Usmani6, Torben Plesner7, Herve Avet-Loiseau8, Inger Nijhof3, Tuna Mutis3, Jordan M Schecter9, Christopher Chiu2, Nizar J Bahlis10.
Abstract
CD38-targeted antibody, daratumumab, is approved for the treatment of multiple myeloma (MM). Phase 1/2 studies GEN501/SIRIUS revealed a novel immunomodulatory mechanism of action (MOA) of daratumumab that enhanced the immune response, reducing natural killer (NK) cells without affecting efficacy or safety. We further evaluated daratumumab's effects on immune cells in whole blood samples of relapsed/refractory MM patients from both treatment arms of the phase 3 POLLUX study (lenalidomide/dexamethasone [Rd] or daratumumab plus Rd [D-Rd]) at baseline (D-Rd, 40; Rd, 45) and after 2 months on treatment (D-Rd, 31; Rd, 33) using cytometry by time-of-flight. We confirmed previous reports of NK cell reduction with D-Rd. Persisting NK cells were phenotypically distinct, with increased expression of HLA-DR, CD69, CD127, and CD27. The proportion of T cells increased preferentially in deep responders to D-Rd, with a higher proportion of CD8+ versus CD4+ T cells. The expansion of CD8+ T cells correlated with clonality, indicating generation of adaptive immune response with D-Rd. D-Rd resulted in a higher proportion of effector memory T cells versus Rd. D-Rd reduced immunosuppressive CD38+ regulatory T cells. This study confirms daratumumab's immunomodulatory MOA in combination with immunomodulatory drugs and provides further insight into immune cell changes and activation status following daratumumab-based therapy.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457357 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-020-0855-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528