IFNγ-induced chemokines are required for CXCR3-mediated T-cell recruitment and antitumor efficacy of anti-HER2/CD3 bispecific antibody

J Li, R Ybarra, J Mak, A Herault, P De Almeida… - Clinical Cancer …, 2018 - AACR
J Li, R Ybarra, J Mak, A Herault, P De Almeida, A Arrazate, J Ziai, K Totpal, MR Junttila
Clinical Cancer Research, 2018AACR
Purpose: The response to cancer immune therapy is dependent on endogenous tumor-
reactive T cells. To bypass this requirement, CD3-bispecific antibodies have been
developed to induce a polyclonal T-cell response against the tumor. Anti-HER2/CD3 T-cell–
dependent bispecific (TDB) antibody is highly efficacious in the treatment of HER2-
overexpressing tumors in mice. Efficacy and immunologic effects of anti-HER2/CD3 TDB
were investigated in mammary tumor model with very few T cells prior treatment. We further …
Purpose
The response to cancer immune therapy is dependent on endogenous tumor-reactive T cells. To bypass this requirement, CD3-bispecific antibodies have been developed to induce a polyclonal T-cell response against the tumor. Anti-HER2/CD3 T-cell–dependent bispecific (TDB) antibody is highly efficacious in the treatment of HER2-overexpressing tumors in mice. Efficacy and immunologic effects of anti-HER2/CD3 TDB were investigated in mammary tumor model with very few T cells prior treatment. We further describe the mechanism for TDB-induced T-cell recruitment to tumors.
Experimental Design
The immunologic effects and the mechanism of CD3-bispecific antibody-induced T-cell recruitment into spontaneous HER2-overexpressing mammary tumors was studied using human HER2 transgenic, immunocompetent mouse models.
Results
Anti-HER2/CD3 TDB treatment induced an inflammatory response in tumors converting them from poorly infiltrated to an inflamed, T-cell abundant, phenotype. Multiple mechanisms accounted for the TDB-induced increase in T cells within tumors. TDB treatment induced CD8+ T-cell proliferation. T cells were also actively recruited post-TDB treatment by IFNγ-dependent T-cell chemokines mediated via CXCR3. This active T-cell recruitment by TDB-induced chemokine signaling was the dominant mechanism and necessary for the therapeutic activity of anti-HER2/CD3 TDB.
Conclusions
In summary, we demonstrate that the activity of anti-HER2/CD3 TDB was not dependent on high-level baseline T-cell infiltration. Our results suggest that anti-HER2/CD3 TDB may be efficacious in patients and indications that respond poorly to checkpoint inhibitors. An active T-cell recruitment mediated by TDB-induced chemokine signaling was the major mechanism for T-cell recruitment.
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