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Profiling of patients with glioma reveals the dominant immunosuppressive axis is refractory to immune function restoration
Martina Ott, … , Michael A. Curran, Amy B. Heimberger
Martina Ott, … , Michael A. Curran, Amy B. Heimberger
Published July 28, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(17):e134386. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.134386.
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

Profiling of patients with glioma reveals the dominant immunosuppressive axis is refractory to immune function restoration

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Abstract

In order to prioritize available immune therapeutics, immune profiling across glioma grades was conducted, followed by preclinical determinations of therapeutic effect in immune-competent mice harboring gliomas. T cells and myeloid cells were isolated from the blood of healthy donors and the blood and tumors from patients with glioma and profiled for the expression of immunomodulatory targets with an available therapeutic. Murine glioma models were used to assess therapeutic efficacy of agents targeting the most frequently expressed immune targets. In patients with glioma, the A2aR/CD73/CD39 pathway was most frequently expressed, followed by the PD-1 pathway. CD73 expression was upregulated on immune cells by 2-hydroxyglutarate in IDH1 mutant glioma patients. In murine glioma models, adenosine receptor inhibitors demonstrated a modest therapeutic response; however, the addition of other inhibitors of the adenosine pathway did not further enhance this therapeutic effect. Although adenosine receptor inhibitors could recover immunological effector functions in T cells, immune recovery was impaired in the presence of gliomas, indicating that irreversible immune exhaustion limits the effectiveness of adenosine pathway inhibitors in patients with glioma. This study illustrates vetting steps that should be considered before clinical trial implementation for immunotherapy-resistant cancers, including testing an agent’s ability to restore immunological function in the context of intended use.

Authors

Martina Ott, Karl-Heinz Tomaszowski, Anantha Marisetty, Ling-Yuan Kong, Jun Wei, Maya Duna, Katia Blumberg, Xiaorong Ji, Carmen Jacobs, Gregory N. Fuller, Lauren A. Langford, Jason T. Huse, James P. Long, Jian Hu, Shulin Li, Jeffrey S. Weinberg, Sujit S. Prabhu, Raymond Sawaya, Sherise Ferguson, Ganesh Rao, Frederick F. Lang, Michael A. Curran, Amy B. Heimberger

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Figure 6

Targeting the adenosine pathway in murine glioma models.

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Targeting the adenosine pathway in murine glioma models.
(A) C57BL/6 mic...
(A) C57BL/6 mice with intracranially implanted CD73-expressing GL261 cells treated with combinatorial anti–PD-1 and SCH58261. (B) Survival curve of C57BL/6 mice intracranially implanted with CD73-overexpressing GL261 cells and treated with anti–PD-1 (days 7, 9, and 11), SCH58261 (daily on days 3–21), vehicle control, or isotype control. The median survival duration of the DMSO + IgG control group was 22 days. Anti–PD-1 increased this to 26 days relative to the control (P = 0.0216), and the A2aR inhibitor increased it to 25 days (P = 0.0310); however, the combination of A2aR and anti–PD-1 was not additive or synergistic for enhanced survival. (C) C57BL6/J mice with intracranially implanted CD73-expressing GL261 cells treated with anti-CD73, the CD39 inhibitor POM-1, the adenosine receptor inhibitor vipadenant, or a combination. (D) Survival curve of C57BL/6 mice intracranially implanted with CD73-overexpressing GL261 cells and treated with IgG + vehicle control (n = 8), IgG + vipadenant (n = 8), anti-CD73 + control (n = 8), anti-CD73 + vipadenant (n = 8), IgG + vehicle control + POM-1 (n = 8), or anti-CD73 + vipadenant + POM-1 (n = 8). Vipadenant or vehicle control was administered daily for 21 days, starting on day 3 (60 mg/kg, i.p.); anti-CD73 or IgG control (200 μg/mouse, i.v.) was administered on days 3, 6, 10, 13, 17, and 20; and POM-1 or PBS control (5 mg/kg; i.p.) was administered daily from day 3 to day 13. The median survival duration of the control IgG-treated group was 27 days, anti-CD73 + control was 32 days, POM + control was 29 days, vipadenant + control was 30 days, and CD73 + vipadenant + POM was 31 days. P values were calculated using the log-rank test.

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