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16 result(s) for "von Blomberg, B Mary E"
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T cell profiling reveals high CD4+CTLA-4+ T cell frequency as dominant predictor for survival after Prostate GVAX/ipilimumab treatment
Immune checkpoint blockade enhances antitumor responses, but can also lead to severe immune-related adverse events (IRAE). To avoid unnecessary exposure to these potentially hazardous agents, it is important to identify biomarkers that correlate with clinical activity and can be used to select patients that will benefit from immune checkpoint blockade. To understand the consequences of CTLA-4 blockade and identify biomarkers for clinical efficacy and/or survival, an exploratory T cell monitoring study was performed in a phase I/II dose escalation/expansion trial ( n  = 28) of combined Prostate GVAX/ipilimumab immunotherapy. Phenotypic T cell monitoring in peripheral blood before and after Prostate GVAX/ipilimumab treatment revealed striking differences between patients who benefited from therapy and patients that did not. Treatment-induced rises in absolute lymphocyte counts, CD4 + T cell differentiation, and CD4 + and CD8 + T cell activation were all associated with clinical benefit. Moreover, significantly prolonged overall survival (OS) was observed for patients with high pre-treatment frequencies of CD4 + CTLA-4 + , CD4 + PD-1 + , or differentiated (i.e., non-naive) CD8 + T cells or low pre-treatment frequencies of differentiated CD4 + or regulatory T cells. Unsupervised clustering of these immune biomarkers revealed cancer-related expression of CTLA-4 + in CD4 + T cells to be a dominant predictor for survival after Prostate GVAX/ipilimumab therapy and to thus provide a putative and much-needed biomarker for patient selection prior to therapeutic CTLA4 blockade.
Clinical practice
Coeliac disease (CD) is an immune-mediated systemic condition elicited by gluten and related prolamines in genetically predisposed individuals and characterised by gluten-induced symptoms and signs, specific antibodies, a specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA) type and enteropathy. The risk of coeliac disease is increased in first-degree relatives, certain syndromes including Down syndrome and autoimmune disorders. It is thought to occur in 1 in 100–200 individuals, but still only one in four cases is diagnosed. Small-bowel biopsy is no longer deemed necessary in a subgroup of patients, i.e. when all of the following are present: typical symptoms or signs, high titres of and transglutaminase antibodies, endomysial antibodies, and HLA-type DQ2 or DQ8. In all other cases, small-bowel biopsy remains mandatory for a correct diagnosis. Therapy consists of a strictly gluten-free diet. This should result in complete disappearance of symptoms and of serological markers. Adequate follow-up is considered essential. Conclusion : Although small-bowel biopsy may be omitted in a minority of patients, small-bowel biopsy is essential for a correct diagnosis of CD in all other cases. Diagnostic work-up should be completed before treatment with gluten-free diet instituted.
Pharmacological induction of interferon type I activity following treatment with rituximab determines clinical response in rheumatoid arthritis
Objective Despite the fact that rituximab depletes B cells in all treated patients with RA, not all patients show a favourable clinical response. The goal of this study was to provide insight into pharmacological changes in peripheral blood that are associated with clinical response to rituximab. Methods Gene expression profiling was performed on peripheral blood RNA of 13 patients with RA (test group) using Illumina HumanHT beadchip microarrays. An independent group of nine patients was used for validation using TaqMan quantitative PCR. Clinical responder status was determined after 6 months using change in 28-joint Disease Activity Score (ΔDAS28) and European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) response criteria. Significance analysis of microarrays and ontology analysis were used for data analysis and interpretation. Results Pharmacogenomic analyses demonstrated marked interindividual differences in the pharmacological responses at 3 and 6 months after start of treatment with rituximab. Interestingly, only differences in the regulation of type I interferon (IFN)-response genes after 3 months correlated with the ΔDAS28 response. Good responders (∆DAS>1.2; n=7) exhibited a selective increase in the expression of type I IFN-response genes, whereas this activity was unchanged or hardly changed in non-responders (∆DAS<1.2; n=6) (p=0.0040 at a cut-off of 1.1-fold induction). Similar results were obtained using EULAR response criteria. These results were validated in an independent cohort of nine patients (five non-responders and four responders, p=0.0317). Conclusions A good clinical response to rituximab in RA is associated with a selective drug-induced increase in type I IFN-response activity in patients with RA. This finding may provide insight in the biological mechanism underlying the therapeutic response to rituximab.
A Carbohydrate-Rich Beverage Prior to Surgery Prevents Surgery-Induced Immunodepression: A Randomized, Controlled, Clinical Trial
Background: Fasting before surgery is still common care in a lot of western hospitals. Overnight fasting can induce postoperative insulin resistance. Insulin resistance has been shown to be related to infectious morbidity. It was shown that postoperative insulin resistance can be attenuated by preoperative intake of a clear carbohydrate-rich beverage. The aim of this study was to investigate whether preoperative intake of carbohydrate-rich beverages could postoperatively influence the immune system. Methods: In this randomized, controlled study, we investigated the effect of surgery on the postoperative immune response in 10 preoperatively fasted patients (control) and 2 groups of 10 patients receiving 2 different carbohydrate-rich beverages preoperatively, by measuring human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR expression on monocytes on the day before and on the day after surgery. Furthermore, we studied perioperative fluid homeostasis and preoperative well-being of the patients. Results: HLA-DR expression decreased significantly after surgery in the control group. Patients receiving any of the 2 carbohydrate-rich beverages did not show this postoperative decrease. Fluid homeostasis was not affected in any of the groups, and well-being tended to be better in patients receiving carbohydrate-rich beverages compared with controls. Conclusion: This study suggests that preoperative intake of a carbohydrate-rich beverage can prevent surgery-induced immunodepression and thus might reduce the risk of infectious complications. The results from this study show that human leukocyte antigen-DR expression decreased significantly after surgery in patients who were fasted before surgery. Patients who received a carbohydrate-rich beverage did not show this postoperative decrease.
Combined immunotherapy with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-transduced allogeneic prostate cancer cells and ipilimumab in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer: a phase 1 dose-escalation trial
The granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-transduced allogeneic prostate cancer cells vaccine (GVAX) has antitumour activity against prostate cancer; preclinical studies have shown potent synergy when combined with ipilimumab, an antibody that blocks cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4. We aimed to assess the safety of combined treatment with GVAX and ipilimumab in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). We did an open-labelled, single-centre, dose-escalation study of ipilimumab concurrent with a fixed dose of GVAX, with a subsequent expansion phase, both at the VU University Medical Centre (Amsterdam, Netherlands). Eligible patients had documented mCRPC and had not been previously treated with chemotherapy. All patients received a 5×108 cell priming dose of GVAX intradermally on day 1 with subsequent intradermal injections of 3×108 cells every 2 weeks for 24 weeks. The vaccinations were combined with intravenous ipilimumab every 4 weeks. We enrolled patients in cohorts of three; each cohort received an escalating dose of ipilimumab at 0·3, 1·0, 3·0, or 5·0 mg/kg. Our primary endpoint was safety. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01510288. We enrolled 12 patients into our dose-escalation cohort. We did not record any severe immune-related adverse events at the first two dose levels. At the 3·0 mg/kg dose level, one patient had grade 2 and two patients grade 3 hypophysitis; at the 5·0 mg/kg dose level, two patients had grade 3 hypophysitis and one patient developed grade 4 sarcoid alveolitis (a dose-limiting toxic effect). Due to observed clinical activity and toxic events, we decided to expand the 3·0 mg/kg dose level, rather than enrol a further three patients at the 5·0 mg/kg level. 16 patients were enrolled in the expansion cohort, two of whom developed grade 2 hypophysitis, three colitis (one grade 1 and two grade 2), and one grade 3 hepatitis—all immune-related adverse events. The most common adverse events noted in all 28 patients were injection-site reactions (grade 1–2 events seen in all patients), fatigue (grade 1–2 in 20 patients, grade 3 in two), and pyrexia (grade 1–2 in 15 patients, grade 3 in one). 50% or greater declines in prostate-specific antigen from baseline was recorded in seven patients (25%); all had received 3·0 mg/kg or 5·0 mg/kg ipilimumab. GVAX combined with 3·0 mg/kg ipilimumab is tolerable and safe for patients with mCRPC. Further research on the combined treatment of patients with mCRPC with vaccination and ipilimumab is warranted. Cell Genesys Inc, Prostate Cancer Foundation, Dutch Cancer Society (KWF-VU 2006-3697), and Foundation Stichting VUmc Cancer Center Amsterdam.
The Presence of Small Intestinal Intraepithelial Gamma/Delta T-Lymphocytes Is Inversely Correlated With Lymphoma Development in Refractory Celiac Disease
In refractory celiac disease (RCD) type II, a phenotypically aberrant (CD7+ CD3- CD4/8-cytoplasmicCD3+) intraepithelial lymphocyte (IEL) population is present, and 50-60% of these patients develop enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL). TCRgammadelta+ IELs play an important role in mucosal repair, homeostasis, and tumor surveillance. Recently, human small intestinal TCRgammadelta+ IELs were shown to have regulatory potential in uncomplicated celiac disease (CD). In the present study, we investigated whether TCRgammadelta+ IELs are decreased in RCD II, providing a possible explanation for persisting mucosal damage and inflammation, and the emergence of aberrant T cells with clonal expansion to EATL. Multiparameter flow cytometric immunophenotyping was performed on IELs isolated from fresh small bowel biopsy specimens of relatively large distinct CD patient and control groups (N = 87). A significantly lower percentage of TCRgammadelta+ IELs was found in RCD II as compared to all other CD groups. In contrast, in uncomplicated CD patients significantly more TCRgammadelta+ IELs were found than in controls. Overall, there is a clear negative relation between TCRgammadelta+ IELs and aberrant IELs. Interestingly, TCRgammadelta+ IELs increase again in RCD II after effective therapy. The observed negative relation between TCRgammadelta+ and aberrant IELs, along with their known regulatory capacity in uncomplicated CD, implies that TCRgammadelta+ IELs may play a crucial role in mucosal repair, regaining homeostasis and possibly even tumor surveillance. These cells may be important markers, in addition to the aberrant T cells, to differentiate between disease categories and to evaluate the effectiveness of therapeutic strategies.
Serum parameters in the spectrum of coeliac disease: beyond standard antibody testing - a cohort study
Background Invasive techniques are still required to distinguish between uncomplicated and complicated forms of CD. Methods We set out to investigate the potential use of novel serum parameters, including IL-6, IL-8, IL-17, IL-22, sCD25, sCD27, granzyme-B, sMICA and sCTLA-4 in patients diagnosed with active CD, CD on a GFD, Refractory coeliac disease (RCD) type I and II, and enteropathy associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL). Results In both active CD and RCDI-II elevated levels of the proinflammatory IL-8, IL-17 and sCD25 were observed. In addition, RCDII patients displayed higher serum levels of soluble granzyme-B and IL-6 in comparison to active CD patients. In contrast, no differences between RCDI and active CD or RCDII were observed. Furthermore, EATL patients displayed higher levels of IL-6 as compared to all other groups. Conclusions A series of novel serum parameters reveal distinctive immunological characteristics of RCDII and EATL in comparison to uncomplicated CD and RCDI.
B cell signature contributes to the prediction of RA development in patients with arthralgia
Anticitrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) and rheumatoid factor (RF) are established predictive markers, 2 3 but only 20-40% of ACPA and/or RF positive patients with arthralgia develop RA within 2 years. 4 Recently, we have demonstrated that the type I interferon (IFN) signature correctly identifies 52% of patients with arthralgia who will develop RA within 2 years. 5 6 Our previous study suggested that a B cell related gene signature was associated with protection against arthritis development, 6 and could aid in the prediction of arthritis development. [...]the combination of the B cell and previously described type I IFN signature represents a clinically useful biomarker to predict arthritis development in seropositive patients with arthralgia.
Survival of Malnourished Head and Neck Cancer Patients Can Be Predicted by Human Leukocyte Antigen-DR Expression and Interleukin-6/Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Response of the Monocyte
Background: Patients with advanced stages of head and neck cancer are often characterized by malnutrition and by an impaired immune system. Because some of the suppressed immune parameters were shown to be of prognostic importance in trauma and sepsis, we investigated whether these would also correlate with survival in head and neck cancer. Methods: Severely malnourished head and neck cancer patients undergoing ablative and reconstructive surgery were followed prospectively and their perioperative immune parameters were related to long-term survival. Results: Forty-nine patients with a preoperative weight loss of more than 10% were followed up for a period of at least 16 months after surgery. Analyses of variance revealed that preoperative human leukocyte antigen-DR (HLA-DR) expression on monocytes and endotoxin-induced production of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) were different between patients who survived and patients who died. Proportional hazards identified a weight loss of more than 12%, the presence of coexistent disease, and an HLA-DR expression on monocytes below the cutoff points (mean fluorescence index < 15, peak channel index < 9) to be of significant influence on survival. Conclusions: In addition to known prognostic parameters such as tumor stage, coexistent disease, and weight loss, the immune parameters HLA-DR expression on monocytes and endotoxin-induced cytokine production may carry prognostic value in cancer patients. Immunomodulating therapies leading to improvement of these parameters might in the future lead to increased options for treatment. (Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition 24:329-336, 2000)