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Data from Targeted Natural Killer Cell–Based Adoptive Immunotherapy for the Treatment of Patients with NSCLC after Radiochemotherapy: A Randomized Phase II Clinical Trial

Authors :
Stephanie E. Combs
Andreas Sauter
Michal Devecka
Bernhard Haller
Hanno Specht
Michael Molls
Thomas Duell
Hubert Hautmann
Rudolf Huber
Dorota Lubgan
Rainer Fietkau
Claus Rödel
Matthias Hautmann
Konrad Kokowski
Norbert Ahrens
Robert Offner
Martin Hildebrandt
Christiane Blankenstein
A. Graham Pockley
Caroline Werner
Maxim Shevtsov
Wolfgang Sievert
Stefan Stangl
Sophie Seier
Gabriele Multhoff
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a fatal disease with poor prognosis. A membrane-bound form of Hsp70 (mHsp70) which is selectively expressed on high-risk tumors serves as a target for mHsp70-targeting natural killer (NK) cells. Patients with advanced mHsp70-positive NSCLC may therefore benefit from a therapeutic intervention involving mHsp70-targeting NK cells. The randomized phase II clinical trial (EudraCT2008-002130-30) explores tolerability and efficacy of ex vivo–activated NK cells in patients with NSCLC after radiochemotherapy (RCT).Patients and Methods:Patients with unresectable, mHsp70-positive NSCLC (stage IIIa/b) received 4 cycles of autologous NK cells activated ex vivo with TKD/IL2 [interventional arm (INT)] after RCT (60–70 Gy, platinum-based chemotherapy) or RCT alone [control arm (CTRL)]. The primary objective was progression-free survival (PFS), and secondary objectives were the assessment of quality of life (QoL, QLQ-LC13), toxicity, and immunobiological responses.Results:The NK-cell therapy after RCT was well tolerated, and no differences in QoL parameters between the two study arms were detected. Estimated 1-year probabilities for PFS were 67% [95% confidence interval (CI), 19%–90%] for the INT arm and 33% (95% CI, 5%–68%) for the CTRL arm (P = 0.36, 1-sided log-rank test). Clinical responses in the INT group were associated with an increase in the prevalence of activated NK cells in their peripheral blood.Conclusions:Ex vivo TKD/IL2-activated, autologous NK cells are well tolerated and deliver positive clinical responses in patients with advanced NSCLC after RCT.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8285b62d1cc0f7b87499419a0eff3e51
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.c.6529371.v1