JCI Insight (Sep 2022)

Immune cells and their inflammatory mediators modify β cells and cause checkpoint inhibitor–induced diabetes

  • Ana Luisa Perdigoto,
  • Songyan Deng,
  • Katherine C. Du,
  • Manik Kuchroo,
  • Daniel B. Burkhardt,
  • Alexander Tong,
  • Gary Israel,
  • Marie E. Robert,
  • Stuart P. Weisberg,
  • Nancy Kirkiles-Smith,
  • Angeliki M. Stamatouli,
  • Harriet M. Kluger,
  • Zoe Quandt,
  • Arabella Young,
  • Mei-Ling Yang,
  • Mark J. Mamula,
  • Jordan S. Pober,
  • Mark S. Anderson,
  • Smita Krishnaswamy,
  • Kevan C. Herold

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 17

Abstract

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Checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs) targeting programmed death 1 (PD-1)/programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) have revolutionized cancer treatment but can trigger autoimmune complications, including CPI-induced diabetes mellitus (CPI-DM), which occurs preferentially with PD-1 blockade. We found evidence of pancreatic inflammation in patients with CPI-DM with shrinkage of pancreases, increased pancreatic enzymes, and in a case from a patient who died with CPI-DM, peri-islet lymphocytic infiltration. In the NOD mouse model, anti–PD-L1 but not anti–CTLA-4 induced diabetes rapidly. RNA sequencing revealed that cytolytic IFN-γ+CD8+ T cells infiltrated islets with anti–PD-L1. Changes in β cells were predominantly driven by IFN-γ and TNF-α and included induction of a potentially novel β cell population with transcriptional changes suggesting dedifferentiation. IFN-γ increased checkpoint ligand expression and activated apoptosis pathways in human β cells in vitro. Treatment with anti–IFN-γ and anti–TNF-α prevented CPI-DM in anti–PD-L1–treated NOD mice. CPIs targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway resulted in transcriptional changes in β cells and immune infiltrates that may lead to the development of diabetes. Inhibition of inflammatory cytokines can prevent CPI-DM, suggesting a strategy for clinical application to prevent this complication.

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