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Leukemia vaccine overcomes limitations of checkpoint blockade by evoking clonal T cell responses in a murine acute myeloid leukemia model

Authors :
Dina Stroopinsky
Jessica Liegel
Manoj Bhasin
Giulia Cheloni
Beena Thomas
Swati Bhasin
Ruchit Panchal
Haider Ghiasuddin
Maryam Rahimian
Myrna Nahas
Shira Orr
Marzia Capelletti
Daniela Torres
Cansu Tacettin
Matthew Weinstock
Lina Bisharat
Adam Morin
Kathleen M. Mahoney
Benjamin Ebert
Richard Stone
Donald Kufe
Gordon J. Freeman
Jacalyn Rosenblatt
David Avigan
Source :
Haematologica, Vol 106, Iss 5 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2021.

Abstract

We have developed a personalized vaccine whereby patient derived leukemia cells are fused to autologous dendritic cells, evoking a polyclonal T cell response against shared and neo-antigens. We postulated that the dendritic cell (DC)/AML fusion vaccine would demonstrate synergy with checkpoint blockade by expanding tumor antigen specific lymphocytes that would provide a critical substrate for checkpoint blockade mediated activation. Using an immunocompetent murine leukemia model, we examined the immunologic response and therapeutic efficacy of vaccination in conjunction with checkpoint blockade with respect to leukemia engraftment, disease burden, survival and the induction of tumor specific immunity. Mice treated with checkpoint blockade alone had rapid leukemia progression and demonstrated only a modest extension of survival. Vaccination with DC/AML fusions resulted in the expansion of tumor specific lymphocytes and disease eradication in a subset of animals, while the combination of vaccination and checkpoint blockade induced a fully protective tumor specific immune response in all treated animals. Vaccination followed by checkpoint blockade resulted in upregulation of genes regulating activation and proliferation in memory and effector T cells. Long term survivors exhibited increased T cell clonal diversity and were resistant to subsequent tumor challenge. The combined DC/AML fusion vaccine and checkpoint blockade treatment offers unique synergy inducing the durable activation of leukemia specific immunity, protection from lethal tumor challenge and the selective expansion of tumor reactive clones.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03906078 and 15928721
Volume :
106
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2a6291d314f043b989dfb3f94c54168f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2020.259457