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First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma

Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) is an incurable low-grade B-cell lymphoma of the bone marrow. Despite a cumulative risk of progression, there is no approved therapy for patients in the asymptomatic phase. We conducted a first-in-human clinical trial of a novel therapeutic DNA idiotype neoantigen va...

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Autores principales: Kwak, Larry, Szymura, Szymon, Wang, Lin, Zhang, Tiantian, Cha, Soung-chul, Dong, Zhenyuan, Anderson, Aaron, Oh, Elizabeth, Lee, Vincent, Wang, Zhe, Parshottham, Sapna, Rao, Sheetal, Olsem, Jasper, Crumpton, Brandon, Lee, Hans, Manasanch, Elisabet, Neelapu, Sattva, Thomas, Sheeba
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790486
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3315017/v1
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author Kwak, Larry
Szymura, Szymon
Wang, Lin
Zhang, Tiantian
Cha, Soung-chul
Dong, Zhenyuan
Anderson, Aaron
Oh, Elizabeth
Lee, Vincent
Wang, Zhe
Parshottham, Sapna
Rao, Sheetal
Olsem, Jasper
Crumpton, Brandon
Lee, Hans
Manasanch, Elisabet
Neelapu, Sattva
Thomas, Sheeba
author_facet Kwak, Larry
Szymura, Szymon
Wang, Lin
Zhang, Tiantian
Cha, Soung-chul
Dong, Zhenyuan
Anderson, Aaron
Oh, Elizabeth
Lee, Vincent
Wang, Zhe
Parshottham, Sapna
Rao, Sheetal
Olsem, Jasper
Crumpton, Brandon
Lee, Hans
Manasanch, Elisabet
Neelapu, Sattva
Thomas, Sheeba
author_sort Kwak, Larry
collection PubMed
description Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) is an incurable low-grade B-cell lymphoma of the bone marrow. Despite a cumulative risk of progression, there is no approved therapy for patients in the asymptomatic phase. We conducted a first-in-human clinical trial of a novel therapeutic DNA idiotype neoantigen vaccine in nine patients with asymptomatic LPL. Treatment was well tolerated with no dose limiting toxicities. One patient achieved a minor response, and all remaining patients experienced stable disease, with median time to disease progression of 61+ months. Direct interrogation of the tumor microenvironment by single-cell transcriptome analysis revealed an unexpected dichotomous antitumor response, with significantly reduced numbers of clonal tumor mature B-cells, tracked by their unique BCR, and downregulation of genes involved in signaling pathways critical for B-cell survival post-vaccine, but no change in clonal plasma cell subpopulations. Downregulation of HLA class II molecule expression suggested intrinsic resistance by tumor plasma cell subpopulations and cell-cell interaction analyses predicted paradoxical upregulation of IGF signaling post vaccine by plasma cell, but not mature B-cell subpopulations, suggesting a potential mechanism of acquired resistance. Vaccine therapy induced dynamic changes in bone marrow T-cells, including upregulation of signaling pathways involved in T-cell activation, expansion of T-cell clonotypes, increased T-cell clonal diversity, and functional tumor antigen-specific cytokine production, with little change in co-inhibitory pathways or Treg. Vaccine therapy also globally altered cell-cell communication networks across various bone marrow cell types and was associated with reduction of protumoral signaling by myeloid cells, principally non-classical monocytes. These results suggest that this prototype neoantigen vaccine favorably perturbed the tumor immune microenvironment, resulting in reduction of clonal tumor mature B-cell, but not plasma cell subpopulations. Future strategies to improve clinical efficacy may require combinations of neoantigen vaccines with agents which specifically target LPL plasma cell subpopulations, or enable blockade of IGF-1 signaling or myeloid cell checkpoints.
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spelling pubmed-105434322023-10-03 First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma Kwak, Larry Szymura, Szymon Wang, Lin Zhang, Tiantian Cha, Soung-chul Dong, Zhenyuan Anderson, Aaron Oh, Elizabeth Lee, Vincent Wang, Zhe Parshottham, Sapna Rao, Sheetal Olsem, Jasper Crumpton, Brandon Lee, Hans Manasanch, Elisabet Neelapu, Sattva Thomas, Sheeba Res Sq Article Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) is an incurable low-grade B-cell lymphoma of the bone marrow. Despite a cumulative risk of progression, there is no approved therapy for patients in the asymptomatic phase. We conducted a first-in-human clinical trial of a novel therapeutic DNA idiotype neoantigen vaccine in nine patients with asymptomatic LPL. Treatment was well tolerated with no dose limiting toxicities. One patient achieved a minor response, and all remaining patients experienced stable disease, with median time to disease progression of 61+ months. Direct interrogation of the tumor microenvironment by single-cell transcriptome analysis revealed an unexpected dichotomous antitumor response, with significantly reduced numbers of clonal tumor mature B-cells, tracked by their unique BCR, and downregulation of genes involved in signaling pathways critical for B-cell survival post-vaccine, but no change in clonal plasma cell subpopulations. Downregulation of HLA class II molecule expression suggested intrinsic resistance by tumor plasma cell subpopulations and cell-cell interaction analyses predicted paradoxical upregulation of IGF signaling post vaccine by plasma cell, but not mature B-cell subpopulations, suggesting a potential mechanism of acquired resistance. Vaccine therapy induced dynamic changes in bone marrow T-cells, including upregulation of signaling pathways involved in T-cell activation, expansion of T-cell clonotypes, increased T-cell clonal diversity, and functional tumor antigen-specific cytokine production, with little change in co-inhibitory pathways or Treg. Vaccine therapy also globally altered cell-cell communication networks across various bone marrow cell types and was associated with reduction of protumoral signaling by myeloid cells, principally non-classical monocytes. These results suggest that this prototype neoantigen vaccine favorably perturbed the tumor immune microenvironment, resulting in reduction of clonal tumor mature B-cell, but not plasma cell subpopulations. Future strategies to improve clinical efficacy may require combinations of neoantigen vaccines with agents which specifically target LPL plasma cell subpopulations, or enable blockade of IGF-1 signaling or myeloid cell checkpoints. American Journal Experts 2023-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10543432/ /pubmed/37790486 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3315017/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Kwak, Larry
Szymura, Szymon
Wang, Lin
Zhang, Tiantian
Cha, Soung-chul
Dong, Zhenyuan
Anderson, Aaron
Oh, Elizabeth
Lee, Vincent
Wang, Zhe
Parshottham, Sapna
Rao, Sheetal
Olsem, Jasper
Crumpton, Brandon
Lee, Hans
Manasanch, Elisabet
Neelapu, Sattva
Thomas, Sheeba
First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title_full First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title_fullStr First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title_full_unstemmed First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title_short First-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
title_sort first-in-human clinical trial of personalized neoantigen vaccines as early intervention in untreated patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790486
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3315017/v1
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