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Neoadjuvant intratumoral influenza vaccine treatment in patients with proficient mismatch repair colorectal cancer leads to increased tumor infiltration of CD8+ T cells and upregulation of PD-L1: a phase 1/2 clinical trial

Authors :
Mikail Gögenur
Lukas Balsevicius
Mustafa Bulut
Nesibe Colak
Tobias Freyberg Justesen
Anne-Marie Kanstrup Fiehn
Marianne Bøgevang Jensen
Kathrine Høst-Rasmussen
Britt Cappelen
Shruti Gaggar
Asma Tajik
Jawad Ahmad Zahid
Astrid Louise Bjørn Bennedsen
Tommaso Del Buono D’Ondes
Hans Raskov
Susanne Gjørup Sækmose
Lasse Bremholm Hansen
Ali Salanti
Susanne Brix
Ismail Gögenur
Source :
Gögenur, M, Balsevicius, L, Bulut, M, Colak, N, Justesen, T F, Fiehn, A-M K, Jensen, M B, Høst-Rasmussen, K, Cappelen, B, Gaggar, S, Tajik, A, Zahid, J A, Bennedsen, A L B, D'Ondes, T D B, Raskov, H, Sækmose, S G, Hansen, L B, Salanti, A, Brix, S & Gögenur, I 2023, ' Neoadjuvant intratumoral influenza vaccine treatment in patients with proficient mismatch repair colorectal cancer leads to increased tumor infiltration of CD8+ T cells and upregulation of PD-L1: a phase 1/2 clinical trial ', Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, vol. 11, no. 5, e006774 . https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-006774
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BackgroundIn colorectal cancer, the effects of immune checkpoint inhibitors are mostly limited to patients with deficient mismatch repair tumors, characterized by a high grade infiltration of CD8+T cells. Interventions aimed at increasing intratumoral CD8+T-cell infiltration in proficient mismatch repair tumors are lacking.MethodsWe conducted a proof of concept phase 1/2 clinical trial, where patients with non-metastasizing sigmoid or rectal cancer, scheduled for curative intended surgery, were treated with an endoscopic intratumorally administered neoadjuvant influenza vaccine. Blood and tumor samples were collected before the injection and at the time of surgery. The primary outcome was safety of the intervention. Evaluation of pathological tumor regression grade, immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry of blood, tissue bulk transcriptional analyses, and spatial protein profiling of tumor regions were all secondary outcomes.ResultsA total of 10 patients were included in the trial. Median patient age was 70 years (range 54–78), with 30% women. All patients had proficient mismatch repair Union of International Cancer Control stage I–III tumors. No endoscopic safety events occurred, with all patients undergoing curative surgery as scheduled (median 9 days after intervention). Increased CD8+T-cell tumor infiltration was evident after vaccination (median 73 vs 315 cells/mm2, pConclusionsNeoadjuvant intratumoral influenza vaccine treatment in this cohort was demonstrated to be safe and feasible, and to induce CD8+T-cell infiltration and upregulation of PD-L1 proficient mismatch repair sigmoid and rectal tumors. Definitive conclusions regarding safety and efficacy can only be made in larger cohorts.Trial registration numberNCT04591379.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gögenur, M, Balsevicius, L, Bulut, M, Colak, N, Justesen, T F, Fiehn, A-M K, Jensen, M B, Høst-Rasmussen, K, Cappelen, B, Gaggar, S, Tajik, A, Zahid, J A, Bennedsen, A L B, D'Ondes, T D B, Raskov, H, Sækmose, S G, Hansen, L B, Salanti, A, Brix, S & Gögenur, I 2023, ' Neoadjuvant intratumoral influenza vaccine treatment in patients with proficient mismatch repair colorectal cancer leads to increased tumor infiltration of CD8+ T cells and upregulation of PD-L1: a phase 1/2 clinical trial ', Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, vol. 11, no. 5, e006774 . https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-006774
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....60f85e690fee350b864f70c666637cc7