OncoImmunology (Feb 2017)

Pre-emptive and therapeutic adoptive immunotherapy for nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Phenotype and effector function of T cells impact on clinical response

  • Corey Smith,
  • Victor Lee,
  • Andrea Schuessler,
  • Leone Beagley,
  • Sweera Rehan,
  • Janice Tsang,
  • Vivian Li,
  • Randal Tiu,
  • David Smith,
  • Michelle A. Neller,
  • Katherine K. Matthews,
  • Emma Gostick,
  • David A. Price,
  • Jacqueline Burrows,
  • Glen M. Boyle,
  • Daniel Chua,
  • Benedict Panizza,
  • Sandro V. Porceddu,
  • John Nicholls,
  • Dora Kwong,
  • Rajiv Khanna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2016.1273311
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2

Abstract

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Adoptive T cell therapy has emerged as a powerful strategy to treat human cancers especially haematological malignancies. Extension of these therapies to solid cancers remains a significant challenge especially in the context of defining immunological correlates of clinical responses. Here we describe results from a clinical study investigating autologous Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-specific T cells generated using a novel AdE1-LMPpoly vector to treat patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) either pre-emptively in at-risk patients with no or minimal residual disease (N/MRD) or therapeutically in patients with active recurrent/metastatic disease (ARMD). Tolerability, safety and efficacy, including progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), were evaluated following adoptive T-cell immunotherapy. Twenty-nine patients, including 20 with ARMD and nine with N/MRD, successfully completed T-cell therapy. After a median follow-up of 18.5 months, the median PFS was 5.5 months (95% CI 2.1 to 9.0 months) and the median OS was 38.1 months (95% CI 17.2 months to not reached). Post-immunotherapy analyses revealed that disease stabilization in ARMD patients was significantly associated with the functional and phenotypic composition of in vitro-expanded T cell immunotherapy. These included a higher proportion of effector CD8+ T-cells and an increased number of EBV-specific T-cells with broader antigen specificity. These observations indicate that adoptive immunotherapy with AdE1-LMPpoly-expanded T cells stabilizes relapsed, refractory NPC without significant toxicity. Promising clinical outcomes in N/MRD patients further suggest a potential role for this approach as a consolidation treatment following first-line chemotherapy.

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