JCI Insight (Jul 2021)

TNF blockade uncouples toxicity from antitumor efficacy induced with CD40 chemoimmunotherapy

  • Meredith L. Stone,
  • Jesse Lee,
  • Veronica M. Herrera,
  • Kathleen Graham,
  • Jae W. Lee,
  • Austin Huffman,
  • Heather Coho,
  • Evan Tooker,
  • Max I. Myers,
  • Michael Giannone,
  • Yan Li,
  • Thomas H. Buckingham,
  • Kristen B. Long,
  • Gregory L. Beatty

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 14

Abstract

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Agonist CD40 antibodies are under clinical development in combination with chemotherapy as an approach to prime for antitumor T cell immunity. However, treatment with anti-CD40 is commonly accompanied by both systemic cytokine release and liver transaminase elevations, which together account for the most common dose-limiting toxicities. Moreover, anti-CD40 treatment increases the potential for chemotherapy-induced hepatotoxicity. Here, we report a mechanistic link between cytokine release and hepatotoxicity induced by anti-CD40 when combined with chemotherapy and show that toxicity can be suppressed without impairing therapeutic efficacy. We demonstrate in mice and humans that anti-CD40 triggers transient hepatotoxicity marked by increased serum transaminase levels. In doing so, anti-CD40 sensitizes the liver to drug-induced toxicity. Unexpectedly, this biology is not blocked by the depletion of multiple myeloid cell subsets, including macrophages, inflammatory monocytes, and granulocytes. Transcriptional profiling of the liver after anti-CD40 revealed activation of multiple cytokine pathways including TNF and IL-6. Neutralization of TNF, but not IL-6, prevented sensitization of the liver to hepatotoxicity induced with anti-CD40 in combination with chemotherapy without impacting antitumor efficacy. Our findings reveal a clinically feasible approach to mitigate toxicity without impairing efficacy in the use of agonist CD40 antibodies for cancer immunotherapy.

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