Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Feb 2022)

Combined IL-2, agonistic CD3 and 4-1BB stimulation preserve clonotype hierarchy in propagated non-small cell lung cancer tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes

  • Anirban Maitra,
  • Alexandre Reuben,
  • Chantale Bernatchez,
  • Marie-Andree Forget,
  • Donastas Sakellariou-Thompson,
  • Tina Cascone,
  • Annikka Weissferdt,
  • Jianjun Zhang,
  • Boris Sepesi,
  • Ignacio Wistuba,
  • Ara A Vaporciyan,
  • Marcelo V Negrao,
  • Lorenzo Federico,
  • John V Heymach,
  • Don L Gibbons,
  • Cara L Haymaker,
  • Junya Fujimoto,
  • Jack A Roth,
  • Parin Shah,
  • Peixin Jiang,
  • Roohussaba Khairullah,
  • Yan Long,
  • Shiaw-Yih Lin,
  • Meredith L Frank,
  • Chantal Alexia Neutzler,
  • Chi-Wan B Chow,
  • Kyle Gregory Mitchell,
  • Daniel J McGrail

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2021-003082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2

Abstract

Read online

Background Adoptive cell transfer (ACT) of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) yielded clinical benefit in patients with checkpoint blockade immunotherapy-refractory non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) prompting a renewed interest in TIL-ACT. This preclinical study explores the feasibility of producing a NSCLC TIL product with sufficient numbers and enhanced attributes using an improved culture method.Methods TIL from resected NSCLC tumors were initially cultured using (1) the traditional method using interleukin (IL)-2 alone in 24-well plates (TIL 1.0) or (2) IL-2 in combination with agonistic antibodies against CD3 and 4-1BB (Urelumab) in a G-Rex flask (TIL 3.0). TIL subsequently underwent a rapid expansion protocol (REP) with anti-CD3. Before and after the REP, expanded TIL were phenotyped and the complementarity-determining region 3 β variable region of the T-cell receptor (TCR) was sequenced to assess the T-cell repertoire.Results TIL 3.0 robustly expanded NSCLC TIL while enriching for CD8+ TIL in a shorter manufacturing time when compared with the traditional TIL 1.0 method, achieving a higher success rate and producing 5.3-fold more TIL per successful expansion. The higher proliferative capacity and CD8 content of TIL 3.0 was also observed after the REP. Both steps of expansion did not terminally differentiate/exhaust the TIL but a lesser differentiated population was observed after the first step. TIL initially expanded with the 3.0 method exhibited higher breadth of clonotypes than TIL 1.0 corresponding to a higher repertoire homology with the original tumor, including a higher proportion of the top 10 most prevalent clones from the tumor. TIL 3.0 also retained a higher proportion of putative tumor-specific TCR when compared with TIL 1.0. Numerical expansion of TIL in a REP was found to perturb the clonal hierarchy and lessen the proportion of putative tumor-specific TIL from the TIL 3.0 process.Conclusions We report the feasibility of robustly expanding a T-cell repertoire recapitulating the clonal hierarchy of the T cells in the NSCLC tumor, including a large number of putative tumor-specific TIL clones, using the TIL 3.0 methodology. If scaled up and employed as a sole expansion platform, the robustness and speed of TIL 3.0 may facilitate the testing of TIL-ACT approaches in NSCLC.