OncoImmunology (Jan 2020)

Dexamethasone premedication suppresses vaccine-induced immune responses against cancer

  • Mathias Vormehr,
  • Sophie Lehar,
  • Lena M. Kranz,
  • Siri Tahtinen,
  • Yoko Oei,
  • Vincent Javinal,
  • Lélia Delamarre,
  • Kerstin C. Walzer,
  • Mustafa Diken,
  • Sebastian Kreiter,
  • Ira Mellman,
  • Ugur Sahin,
  • Jill M. Schartner,
  • Özlem Türeci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2020.1758004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Glucocorticosteroids (GCS) have an established role in oncology and are administered to cancer patients in routine clinical care and in drug development trials as co-medication. Given their strong immune-suppressive activity, GCS may interfere with immune-oncology drugs. We are developing a therapeutic cancer vaccine, which is based on a liposomal formulation of tumor-antigen encoding RNA (RNA-LPX) and induces a strong T-cell response both in mice as well as in humans. In this study, we investigated in vivo in mice and in human PBMCs the effect of the commonly used long-acting GCS Dexamethasone (Dexa) on the efficacy of this vaccine format, with a particular focus on antigen-specific T-cell immune responses. We show that Dexa, when used as premedication, substantially blunts RNA-LPX vaccine-mediated immune effects. Premedication with Dexa inhibits vaccine-dependent induction of serum cytokines and chemokines and reduces both the number and activation of splenic conventional dendritic cells (cDC) expressing vaccine-encoded antigens. Consequently, priming of functional effector T cells and therapeutic activity is significantly impaired. Interestingly, responses are less impacted when Dexa is administered post-vaccination. Consistent with this observation, although many inflammatory cytokines are reduced, IFNα, a key cytokine in T-cell priming, is less impacted and antigen expression by cDCs is intact. These findings warrant special caution when combining GCS with immune therapies relying on priming and activation of antigen-specific T cells and suggest that careful sequencing of these treatments may preserve T-cell induction.

Keywords