Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Jun 2023)

BiTE secretion by adoptively transferred stem-like T cells improves FRα+ ovarian cancer control

  • Kunle Odunsi,
  • Takemasa Tsuji,
  • Mark Long,
  • Danuta Kozbor,
  • Scott I Abrams,
  • Emese Zsiros,
  • A J Robert McGray,
  • Jessie L Chiello,
  • Kathryn Maraszek,
  • Nicole Gaulin,
  • Spencer R Rosario,
  • Suzanne M Hess

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-006863
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6

Abstract

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Background Cancer immunotherapies can produce complete therapeutic responses, however, outcomes in ovarian cancer (OC) are modest. While adoptive T-cell transfer (ACT) has been evaluated in OC, durable effects are rare. Poor therapeutic efficacy is likely multifactorial, stemming from limited antigen recognition, insufficient tumor targeting due to a suppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), and limited intratumoral accumulation/persistence of infused T cells. Importantly, host T cells infiltrate tumors, and ACT approaches that leverage endogenous tumor-infiltrating T cells for antitumor immunity could effectively magnify therapeutic responses.Methods Using retroviral transduction, we have generated T cells that secrete a folate receptor alpha (FRα)-directed bispecific T-cell engager (FR-B T cells), a tumor antigen commonly overexpressed in OC and other tumor types. The antitumor activity and therapeutic efficacy of FR-B T cells was assessed using FRα+ cancer cell lines, OC patient samples, and preclinical tumor models with accompanying mechanistic studies. Different cytokine stimulation of T cells (interleukin (IL)-2+IL-7 vs IL-2+IL-15) during FR-B T cell production and the resulting impact on therapeutic outcome following ACT was also assessed.Results FR-B T cells efficiently lysed FRα+ cell lines, targeted FRα+ OC patient tumor cells, and were found to engage and activate patient T cells present in the TME through secretion of T cell engagers. Additionally, FR-B T cell therapy was effective in an immunocompetent in vivo OC model, with response duration dependent on both endogenous T cells and FR-B T cell persistence. IL-2/IL-15 preconditioning prior to ACT produced less differentiated FR-B T cells and enhanced therapeutic efficacy, with mechanistic studies revealing preferential accumulation of TCF-1+CD39−CD69− stem-like CD8+ FR B T cells in the peritoneal cavity over solid tumors.Conclusions These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of FR-B T cells in OC and suggest FR-B T cells can persist in extratumoral spaces while actively directing antitumor immunity. As the therapeutic activity of infused T cell therapies in solid tumor indications is often limited by poor intratumoral accumulation of transferred T cells, engager-secreting T cells that can effectively leverage endogenous immunity may have distinct mechanistic advantages for enhancing therapeutic responses rates.