1. CD4+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes secreting T cell-engagers induce regression of autologous patient-derived non-small cell lung cancer xenografts
- Author
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Anaïs Jiménez-Reinoso, Magdalena Molero-Abraham, Cristina Cirauqui, Belén Blanco, Eva M. Garrido-Martin, Daniel Nehme-Álvarez, Carmen Domínguez-Alonso, Ángel Ramírez-Fernández, Laura Díez-Alonso, Ángel Nuñez-Buiza, África González-Murillo, Raquel Tobes, Eduardo Pareja, Manuel Ramírez-Orellana, José Luis Rodriguez-Peralto, Irene Ferrer, Jon Zugazagoitia, Luis Paz-Ares, and Luis Álvarez-Vallina
- Subjects
Adoptive cell therapy ,bispecific T cell-engagers ,cytotoxic CD4+ TIL ,solid tumors ,tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Adoptive transfer of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) has shown remarkable results in melanoma, but only modest clinical benefits in other cancers, even after TIL have been genetically modified to improve their tumor homing, cytotoxic potential or overcome cell exhaustion. The required ex vivo TIL expansion process may induce changes in the T cell clonal composition, which could likely compromise the tumor reactivity of TIL preparations and ultimately the success of TIL therapy. A promising approach based on the production of bispecific T cell-engagers (TCE) by engineered T cells (STAb-T therapy) improves the efficacy of current T cell redirection strategies against tumor-associated antigens in hematological tumors. We studied the TCRβ repertoire in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumors and in ex vivo expanded TIL from two unrelated patients. We generated TIL secreting anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) × anti-CD3 TCE (TILSTAb) and tested their antitumor efficacy in vitro and in vivo using a NSCLC patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model in which tumor fragments and TIL from the same patient were transplanted into hIL-2 NOG mice. We confirmed that the standard TIL expansion protocol promotes the loss of tumor-dominant T cell clones and the overgrowth of virus-reactive TCR clonotypes that were marginally detectable in primary tumors. We demonstrated the antitumor activity of TILSTAb both in vitro and in vivo when administered intratumorally and systemically in an autologous immune-humanized PDX EGFR+ NSCLC mouse model, where tumor regression was mediated by TCE-redirected CD4+ TIL bearing non-tumor dominant clonotypes.
- Published
- 2024
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