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Intratumoral plasmid IL-12 expands CD8(+) T cells and induces a CXCR3 gene signature in triple-negative breast tumors that sensitizes patients to anti-PD-1 therapy

Authors :
Erica Browning
Erika J. Crosby
Takuya Osada
Bernard A. Fox
Carlo Bifulco
Jendy Sell
Irene Wapnir
Melinda L. Telli
Kaitlin Zablotsky
Reneta Hermiz
Kellie Malloy Foerter
Robert H. Pierce
Chaitanya R. Acharya
Kim Jaffe
Donna Bannavong
Mai Hope Le
H. Kim Lyerly
Shawn M. Jensen
Carmen Ballesteros-Merino
David A. Canton
Christopher G. Twitty
Hiroshi Nagata
Lauren Svenson
Source :
Clin Cancer Res
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive disease with limited therapeutic options. Antibodies targeting programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) have entered the therapeutic landscape in TNBC, but only a minority of patients benefit. A way to reliably enhance immunogenicity, T-cell infiltration, and predict responsiveness is critically needed. Patients and Methods: Using mouse models of TNBC, we evaluate immune activation and tumor targeting of intratumoral IL12 plasmid followed by electroporation (tavokinogene telseplasmid; Tavo). We further present a single-arm, prospective clinical trial of Tavo monotherapy in patients with treatment refractory, advanced TNBC (OMS-I140). Finally, we expand these findings using publicly available breast cancer and melanoma datasets. Results: Single-cell RNA sequencing of murine tumors identified a CXCR3 gene signature (CXCR3-GS) following Tavo treatment associated with enhanced antigen presentation, T-cell infiltration and expansion, and PD-1/PD-L1 expression. Assessment of pretreatment and posttreatment tissue from patients confirms enrichment of this CXCR3-GS in tumors from patients that exhibited an enhancement of CD8+ T-cell infiltration following treatment. One patient, previously unresponsive to anti–PD-L1 therapy, but who exhibited an increased CXCR3-GS after Tavo treatment, went on to receive additional anti–PD-1 therapy as their immediate next treatment after OMS-I140, and demonstrated a significant clinical response. Conclusions: These data show a safe, effective intratumoral therapy that can enhance antigen presentation and recruit CD8 T cells, which are required for the antitumor efficacy. We identify a Tavo treatment-related gene signature associated with improved outcomes and conversion of nonresponsive tumors, potentially even beyond TNBC.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin Cancer Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c48e8953fa4ba2b471eaae121c3944b