4.7 Article

Single dose denileukin diftitox does not enhance vaccine-induced T cell responses or effectively deplete Tregs in advanced melanoma: immune monitoring and clinical results of a randomized phase II trial

Journal

JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0140-2

Keywords

Tregs; Vaccine; Denileukin difitox; Melanoma; Immunotherapy

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [K12 CA139160] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Depletion of CD25(+) Tregs improves anti-tumor immunity in preclinical models. Denileukin diftitox is a recombinant fusion protein of human IL-2 and diptheria toxin fragment that also can kill CD25(+) T cells. Prior clinical trials of denileukin diftitox suggested reduction of FoxP3(+) Tregs and some clinical responses. Method: To investigate the immunologic effects of denileukin difitox on vaccine-specific immune responses in melanoma, a randomized clinical trial of single dose denileukin diftitox prior to vaccination versus vaccination alone in subjects with HLA-A2(+) metastatic melanoma was performed. Treatment included randomization to a 4-peptide vaccine (Melan-A, gp100, MAGE3 and NA17 with GM-CSF emulsified in Montanide) alone or after single dose of denileukin diftitox (18 mcg/ kg). Vaccine was given every 2 weeks for 3 doses and, absent clinical progression, continued every 2 weeks. Blood and tumor biopsies were obtained pretreatment and after 3 vaccinations for immunologic assessments. Results: In 17 treated subjects there were no drug-related G3-4 adverse events. One partial response and 8 stable disease were observed in 9 subjects (4 DD: 5 vaccine only) with no impact of denileukin diftitox on time to progression. Total peripheral Tregs were not significantly altered, and in 1 patient biopsy intra-tumoral FoxP3 transcripts were not reduced following denileukin diftitox. ELISA for IL2R-alpha demonstrated no impact on outcomes by soluble CD25 level. Immune monitoring suggested the development of modest vaccine-specific CD8(+) T cell responses in the control group, however immunization efficacy was actually reduced in the denileukin diftitox group. Conclusion: Our results indicate that denileukin diftitox did not effectively deplete Tregs, augment T cell responses, or improve clinical activity in melanoma. Clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT00515528; Registered August 9, 2007.

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