Abstract IA17: Utilizing synthetic biology and high-dimensional probing to address therapeutic obstacles and empower engineered T cells with the capacity to eradicate tumors
K. Anderson, D. Egan, S. Hingorani, S. Oda, K. Paulson, R. Perret, L. Schmidt, Thomas M. Schmitt, Ingunn M. Stromnes, A. Chapuis, P. Greenberg
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After identifying that WT1, a gene associated with promoting leukemic transformation, is over-expressed in human leukemic stem cells, and demonstrating in a clinical trial that in vitro expanded WT1-specific CD8 T cell clones can be safely transferred, exhibit anti-leukemic activity, and provide therapeutic benefit to AML patients, we extensively screened normal human repertoires and isolated a high affinity TCR specific for WT1 for genetically engineering CD8 T cells to reproducibly create cells with high avidity for leukemic cells. We have initially pursued this strategy in a 2 Arm trial for leukemia patients either at high risk of relapse (Arm 1) after hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) or who have already relapsed after HCT (Arm 2). The prophylactic arm is now completed, with very encouraging results- all patients treated with engineered T cells remain alive and relapse free at a median of 38 months, compared to a relapse rate of ~50% in a concurrent matched cohort. Results in relapsed patients (Arm 2) have been less effective, and we have used high-dimensional analyses including single cell RNAseq both to elucidate the reasons for failure to eradicate the leukemia and to design strategies to overcome these obstacles. Our results have identified several mechanisms by which the leukemia escapes, and we have been testing approaches that employ further genetic modification of the T cells to enhance efficacy. The predominant reason for leukemia progression despite targeted therapy with T cells is the inability of the T cells to persist and maintain function in the context of encountering a rapidly proliferating myeloid leukemia. This reflects both engagement of pathways inhibitory to T cells by the leukemic cells, and apoptosis of the T cells from repetitive stimulation. We are addressing this issue by creating immuno-modulatory fusion proteins (IFPs) that have the ectodomain of an inhibitory or death receptor fused to a survival costimulatory domain. Results with two such IFPs will be discussed, a CD200R/CD28 fusion that binds the inhibitory ligand CD200 commonly expressed on leukemic cells but provides a CD28 costimulatory signal and a Fas/4-1BB fusion that binds FasL but rather than induce death promotes proliferation and survival. A more uncommon reason explaining progression is loss of expression of the WT1 epitope being targeted. This has occurred in 2 patients, but for distinct reasons. In one patient this reflected loss of a component of the immunoproteasome, and we have now isolated a TCR that recognizes an epitope not dependent on the immunoproteasome. In a second patient the level of WT1 expression declined- interestingly, this patient was treated with Vidaza, which can increase expression of WT1, and post-Vidaza the transferred T cells persisting in the patient’s bone marrow recognized and responded in vivo to the relapsing leukemia. The approaches and technologies we are developing and testing in leukemia are also applicable to solid tumors, and preclinical studies in pancreatic and ovarian cancers will be discussed. Citation Format: Kristin G. Anderson, Dan Egan, Sunil R. Hingorani, Shannon K. Oda, Kelly Paulson, Rachel Perret, Leah Schmidt, Thomas Schmitt, Ingunn Stromnes, Aude Chapuis, Philip D. Greenberg. Utilizing synthetic biology and high-dimensional probing to address therapeutic obstacles and empower engineered T cells with the capacity to eradicate tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr IA17.","PeriodicalId":254712,"journal":{"name":"Genetically Engineered T-cells","volume":"9 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Genetically Engineered T-cells","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6074.CRICIMTEATIAACR18-IA17","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
We have been exploring in preclinical models and clinical trials methods to reproducibly provide therapeutic T cell responses by transfer of genetically engineered T cells. Our largest clinical experience is in treating human Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML). After identifying that WT1, a gene associated with promoting leukemic transformation, is over-expressed in human leukemic stem cells, and demonstrating in a clinical trial that in vitro expanded WT1-specific CD8 T cell clones can be safely transferred, exhibit anti-leukemic activity, and provide therapeutic benefit to AML patients, we extensively screened normal human repertoires and isolated a high affinity TCR specific for WT1 for genetically engineering CD8 T cells to reproducibly create cells with high avidity for leukemic cells. We have initially pursued this strategy in a 2 Arm trial for leukemia patients either at high risk of relapse (Arm 1) after hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) or who have already relapsed after HCT (Arm 2). The prophylactic arm is now completed, with very encouraging results- all patients treated with engineered T cells remain alive and relapse free at a median of 38 months, compared to a relapse rate of ~50% in a concurrent matched cohort. Results in relapsed patients (Arm 2) have been less effective, and we have used high-dimensional analyses including single cell RNAseq both to elucidate the reasons for failure to eradicate the leukemia and to design strategies to overcome these obstacles. Our results have identified several mechanisms by which the leukemia escapes, and we have been testing approaches that employ further genetic modification of the T cells to enhance efficacy. The predominant reason for leukemia progression despite targeted therapy with T cells is the inability of the T cells to persist and maintain function in the context of encountering a rapidly proliferating myeloid leukemia. This reflects both engagement of pathways inhibitory to T cells by the leukemic cells, and apoptosis of the T cells from repetitive stimulation. We are addressing this issue by creating immuno-modulatory fusion proteins (IFPs) that have the ectodomain of an inhibitory or death receptor fused to a survival costimulatory domain. Results with two such IFPs will be discussed, a CD200R/CD28 fusion that binds the inhibitory ligand CD200 commonly expressed on leukemic cells but provides a CD28 costimulatory signal and a Fas/4-1BB fusion that binds FasL but rather than induce death promotes proliferation and survival. A more uncommon reason explaining progression is loss of expression of the WT1 epitope being targeted. This has occurred in 2 patients, but for distinct reasons. In one patient this reflected loss of a component of the immunoproteasome, and we have now isolated a TCR that recognizes an epitope not dependent on the immunoproteasome. In a second patient the level of WT1 expression declined- interestingly, this patient was treated with Vidaza, which can increase expression of WT1, and post-Vidaza the transferred T cells persisting in the patient’s bone marrow recognized and responded in vivo to the relapsing leukemia. The approaches and technologies we are developing and testing in leukemia are also applicable to solid tumors, and preclinical studies in pancreatic and ovarian cancers will be discussed. Citation Format: Kristin G. Anderson, Dan Egan, Sunil R. Hingorani, Shannon K. Oda, Kelly Paulson, Rachel Perret, Leah Schmidt, Thomas Schmitt, Ingunn Stromnes, Aude Chapuis, Philip D. Greenberg. Utilizing synthetic biology and high-dimensional probing to address therapeutic obstacles and empower engineered T cells with the capacity to eradicate tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr IA17.
我们一直在探索临床前模型和临床试验方法,通过基因工程T细胞的转移可重复地提供治疗性T细胞反应。我们最大的临床经验是治疗人类急性髓性白血病(AML)。在确定与促进白血病转化相关的基因WT1在人类白血病干细胞中过度表达,并在临床试验中证明体外扩增的WT1特异性CD8 T细胞克隆可以安全转移,表现出抗白血病活性,并为AML患者提供治疗益处后,我们广泛筛选了正常人的基因库,并为基因工程CD8 T细胞分离出一种高亲和力的WT1特异性TCR,以可重复地创造出对白血病细胞具有高亲和力的细胞。我们最初在一项针对造血细胞移植(HCT)后复发风险高(第1组)或HCT后已经复发(第2组)的白血病患者的2组试验中采用了这一策略。预防组现已完成,结果非常令人鼓舞-所有接受工程化T细胞治疗的患者在中位38个月时仍然存活且无复发,而同期匹配队列的复发率约为50%。复发患者(第2组)的结果不太有效,我们使用了高维分析,包括单细胞RNAseq来阐明根除白血病失败的原因,并设计了克服这些障碍的策略。我们的研究结果已经确定了白血病逃逸的几种机制,我们一直在测试进一步对T细胞进行遗传修饰以提高疗效的方法。尽管使用T细胞进行靶向治疗,但白血病进展的主要原因是T细胞在遇到快速增殖的髓性白血病时无法持续和维持功能。这既反映了白血病细胞对T细胞的抑制通路的参与,也反映了T细胞在重复刺激下的凋亡。我们正在通过创建免疫调节融合蛋白(IFPs)来解决这个问题,IFPs具有抑制或死亡受体的外域融合到生存共刺激域。我们将讨论两种IFPs的结果,一种是CD200R/CD28融合,它结合抑制配体CD200,通常在白血病细胞上表达,但提供CD28共刺激信号;另一种是Fas/4-1BB融合,它结合FasL,但不诱导死亡,促进增殖和存活。一个更不常见的解释进展的原因是WT1表位被靶向的表达缺失。2例患者出现过这种情况,但原因各不相同。在一个患者中,这反映了免疫蛋白酶体的一个组成部分的丢失,我们现在已经分离出一个识别不依赖于免疫蛋白酶体的表位的TCR。在第二例患者中,WT1表达水平下降-有趣的是,该患者接受了维达扎治疗,它可以增加WT1的表达,维达扎后,在患者骨髓中持续存在的转移的T细胞在体内识别并应答复发的白血病。我们在白血病中开发和测试的方法和技术也适用于实体肿瘤,并将讨论胰腺癌和卵巢癌的临床前研究。引文格式:Kristin G. Anderson, Dan Egan, Sunil R. Hingorani, Shannon K. Oda, Kelly Paulson, Rachel Perret, Leah Schmidt, Thomas Schmitt, Ingunn Stromnes, Aude Chapuis, Philip D. Greenberg。利用合成生物学和高维探测来解决治疗障碍,并赋予工程T细胞根除肿瘤的能力[摘要]。第四届CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR国际癌症免疫治疗会议:将科学转化为生存;2018年9月30日至10月3日;纽约,纽约。费城(PA): AACR;癌症免疫学杂志,2019;7(2增刊):摘要1 - 17。