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Chemotherapy and radiation therapy elicits tumor specific T cell responses in a breast cancer patient.
- Source :
-
BMC cancer [BMC Cancer] 2016 Aug 03; Vol. 16, pp. 591. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Aug 03. - Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Background: Experimental evidence and clinical studies in breast cancer suggest that some anti-tumor therapy regimens generate stimulation of the immune system that accounts for tumor clinical responses, however, demonstration of the immunostimulatory power of these therapies on cancer patients continues to be a formidable challenge. Here we present experimental evidence from a breast cancer patient with complete clinical response after 7 years, associated with responsiveness of tumor specific T cells.<br />Methods: T cells were obtained before and after anti-tumor therapy from peripheral blood of a 63-years old woman diagnosed with ductal breast cancer (HER2/neu+++, ER-, PR-, HLA-A*02:01) treated with surgery, followed by paclitaxel, trastuzumab (suspended due to cardiac toxicity), and radiotherapy. We obtained a leukapheresis before surgery and after 8 months of treatment. Using in vitro cell cultures stimulated with autologous monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) that produce high levels of IL-12, we characterize by flow cytometry the phenotype of tumor associated antigens (TAAs) HER2/neu and NY-ESO 1 specific T cells. The ex vivo analysis of the TCR-Vβ repertoire of TAA specific T cells in blood and Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (TILs) were performed in order to correlate both repertoires prior and after therapy.<br />Results: We evidence a functional recovery of T cell responsiveness to polyclonal stimuli and expansion of TAAs specific CD8+ T cells using peptide pulsed DCs, with an increase of CTLA-4 and memory effector phenotype after anti-tumor therapy. The ex vivo analysis of the TCR-Vβ repertoire of TAA specific T cells in blood and TILs showed that whereas the TCR-Vβ04-02 clonotype is highly expressed in TILs the HER2/neu specific T cells are expressed mainly in blood after therapy, suggesting that this particular TCR was selectively enriched in blood after anti-tumor therapy.<br />Conclusions: Our results show the benefits of anti-tumor therapy in a breast cancer patient with clinical complete response in two ways, by restoring the responsiveness of T cells by increasing the frequency and activation in peripheral blood of tumor specific T cells present in the tumor before therapy.
- Subjects :
- Antigens, Neoplasm immunology
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use
Breast Neoplasms therapy
Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast therapy
Chemoradiotherapy
Female
Flow Cytometry
Humans
Lymphocyte Activation immunology
Middle Aged
Paclitaxel therapeutic use
Trastuzumab therapeutic use
Breast Neoplasms immunology
Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast immunology
Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating immunology
T-Lymphocytes immunology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1471-2407
- Volume :
- 16
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- BMC cancer
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 27484900
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2625-2