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Old 05-24-2013, 05:37 PM   #1
Lani
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AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lepto-

meningeal) by the father of monoclonal antibody treatment (Responsible for development of rituxumab) used for lymphomas. I first heard him speak 36 years ago


Contact: Jillian Hurst
press_releases@the-jci.org
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Modulating the immune system to combat metastatic cancer

Cancer cells spread and grow by avoiding detection and destruction by the immune system. Stimulation of the immune system can help to eliminate cancer cells; however, there are many factors that cause the immune system to ignore cancer cells. Regulatory T cells are immune cells that function to suppress the immune system response. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Ronald Levy at Stanford University found that regulatory T cells that infiltrate tumors express proteins that can be targeted with therapeutic antibodies. Mice injected with antibodies targeting the proteins CTLA-4 and OX-40 had smaller tumors and improved survival. Moreover, treatment with these antibodies cleared both tumors at the primary site and distant metastases, including brain metastases that are usually difficult to treat. These findings suggest that therapies targeting regulatory T cells could be a promising approach in cancer treatment. In an accompanying commentary, Cristina Ghirelli and Thorsten Hagemann emphasize that in order for this approach to be clinically relevant, it will be important to show that targeting regulatory T cells in metastatic tumors also blocks growth.


###

TITLE:
Depleting tumor-specific Tregs at a single site eradicates disseminated tumors

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Ronald Levy
Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA, USA
Phone: 650-725-6452; Fax: 650-736-1454; E-mail: levy@stanford.edu

View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/648...21d3af9fbb75eb

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY

TITLE:
Targeting immunosuppression for cancer therapy

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Thorsten Hagemann
Barts Cancer Institute, London, UNK, GBR
Phone: +442078825795; Fax: +442078826110; E-mail: t.hagemann@qmul.ac.uk

View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/699...75947229d0146a






J Clin Invest. doi:10.1172/JCI64859.
Copyright © 2013, The American Society for Clinical Investigation.
Research Article

Depleting tumor-specific Tregs at a single site eradicates disseminated tumors

Aurélien Marabelle1,2, Holbrook Kohrt1, Idit Sagiv-Barfi1, Bahareh Ajami3, Robert C. Axtell3,Gang Zhou4, Ranjani Rajapaksa1, Michael R. Green1, James Torchia1, Joshua Brody1, Richard Luong5,Michael D. Rosenblum6, Lawrence Steinman3, Hyam I. Levitsky7, Victor Tse1 and Ronald Levy1

1Department of Medicine, Division of Oncology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
2Centre de Recherche en Cancérologie de Lyon, UMR INSERM U1052 CNRS 5286, Centre Léon Bérard, Université de Lyon, Lyon, France.
3Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
4Cancer Center, Georgia Health Sciences University, Augusta, Georgia, USA.
5Department of Comparative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
6Departments of Dermatology and Pathology, UCSF, San Francisco, California, USA.
7Department of Oncology, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Address correspondence to: Ronald Levy, Division of Oncology, Stanford University, 269 Campus Drive, CCSR 1105, Stanford, California 94305, USA. Phone: 650.725.6452; Fax: 650.725.1420; E-mail: levy@stanford.edu.

Published May 24, 2013
Received for publication May 17, 2012, and accepted in revised form March 14, 2013.

Activation of TLR9 by direct injection of unmethylated CpG nucleotides into a tumor can induce a therapeutic immune response; however, Tregs eventually inhibit the antitumor immune response and thereby limit the power of cancer immunotherapies. In tumor-bearing mice, we found that Tregs within the tumor preferentially express the cell surface markers CTLA-4 and OX40. We show that intratumoral coinjection of anti–CTLA-4 and anti-OX40 together with CpG depleted tumor-infiltrating Tregs. This in situ immunomodulation, which was performed with low doses of antibodies in a single tumor, generated a systemic antitumor immune response that eradicated disseminated disease in mice. Further, this treatment modality was effective against established CNS lymphoma with leptomeningeal metastases, sites that are usually considered to be tumor cell sanctuaries in the context of conventional systemic therapy. These results demonstrate that antitumor immune effectors elicited by local immunomodulation can eradicate tumor cells at distant sites. We propose that, rather than using mAbs to target cancer cells systemically, mAbs could be used to target the tumor infiltrative immune cells locally, thereby eliciting a systemic immune response.







Having demonstrated the systemic efficacy of our in situ immunotherapy on different models of metastatic tumors, we decided to assess the ability of the antitumor immune response to eradicate tumor cells within the CNS. This question is of the utmost importance both for fundamental immunology and for clinical practice. Indeed, the original experiments of Medawar showed that the brain is an immunologically privileged site for skin allografts (45, 46). In clinical practice, a primary or secondary CNS involvement of any cancer indicates poor prognosis, because all of our treatments, including antitumor mAbs, fail to cross the blood-brain barrier (47, 48). Indeed, in our experiments, chemotherapy and a tumor-targeting mAb showed little effect against the implanted CNS disease. By contrast, injection of CpG and low-dose αOX40/CTLA4 into s.c. tumors eradicated tumor in the brain as well as leptomeningeal and spinal cord metastases. Moreover, cured mice had a long-term, CD8+-dependent, intra-CNS immune protection from late contralateral i.c. tumor rechallenge. Recent murine studies have shown that T cells directed against alloantigens (49) or against nonsyngeneic tumors can access the brain (50–53). Moreover, it has been shown in humans that adoptive antitumor T cell therapy can have an effect against brain tumor sites (54). However, such a strategy requires a conditioning regimen prior to the administration of these ex vivo–generated antitumor T cells. Here we show in a syngeneic tumor model that in situ immunomodulation in a peripheral tumor site generates an antitumor immune response within the distant tumor sites, including in the brain, and is able to eradicate established disseminated disease and provide vaccine protection in the CNS.

Taken together, our results support a paradigm shift in cancer therapy, in which, instead of using mAbs to target the tumor, mAbs will be used to target the immune system in order to stimulate the antitumor immune response. Additionally, instead of systemic treatment, all of the therapies will be delivered locally, with resulting systemic eradication of tumor. This strategy of local tumor immunomodulation could be tested soon in patients, since many of the relevant ligands and antibodies are currently in clinical development.
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Old 05-24-2013, 07:41 PM   #2
mamacze
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

Lani, you are right, this is amazing news. I stand in awe of the strides researchers are making on our behalf. Such an interesting paradigm shift. To think it may actually happen in our lifetime....
Thank you, once again for your diligence in posting such uplifting news.
Kim (from CT)
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2001 - Stage 0, lumpectomy, radiation, tamoxifen

2004 - Stage 4, mets to 4 lobes of lungs and liver, lumpectomy, er/pr -, her2 neu+++, Herceptin and Navelbine then Herceptin only.

2005 - Breast Ca vaccinations with the Tumor Vaccine Group in Seattle

2011 - Still Herceptin only and NED


2011, June - STOPPED Herceptin and kicked up my heels!

2012, February - 1 small tumor came back to haunt me in my lungs - back on Herceptin only, tumor stable.


2015, November - tumor on lungs removed (Segmentectomy), back on Herceptin only
Received U of W vaccine clinical "booster" Vaccine


2022 On Herceptin and NED continues - WOOT WOOT!
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Old 05-25-2013, 04:45 AM   #3
Ellie F
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

Wow, what an interesting shift in thinking. What feel especially positive is that a lot of these drugs are readily available so hopefully no long delays?
Ellie
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Old 05-26-2013, 06:41 PM   #4
NEDenise
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

Wow indeed!
This sounds like a real breakthrough.
Thanks for finding this, and posting it for us!
Denise
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Old 05-26-2013, 09:29 PM   #5
Mandamoo
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

I love reading of such things but then I see mice... Might help my daughters if they ever need it which I so hope that they don't.
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Old 06-04-2013, 03:41 PM   #6
Mtngrl
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

My "in person" support group moderator sent us a paper from ASCO that said Trastuzumab and chemotherapy may act as a "vaccine" for people with metastatic breast cancer. And that was a study with human subjects.
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Amy
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4/19/11 Diagnosed invasive ductal carcinoma in left breast; 2.3 cm tumor, 1 axillary lymph node, weakly ER+, HER2+++
4/29/11 CT scan shows suspicious lesions on liver and lungs
5/17/11 liver biopsy
5/24/11 liver met confirmed--Stage IV at diagnosis
5/27/11 Begin weekly Taxol & Herceptin for 3 months (standard of care at the time of my DX)
7/18/11 Switch to weekly Abraxane & Herceptin due to Taxol allergy
8/29/11 CT scan shows no new lesions & old lesions shrinking
9/27/11 Finish Abraxane. Start Herceptin every 3 weeks. Begin taking Arimidex
10/17/11--Brain MRI--No Brain mets
12/5/11 PET scan--Almost NED
5/15/12 PET scan shows progression-breast/chest/spine (one vertebra)
5/22/12 Stop taking Arimidex; stay on Herceptin
6/11/12 Started Tykerb and Herceptin on clinical trial (w/no chemo)
9/24/12 CT scan--No new mets. Everything stable.
3/11/13 CT Scan--two small new possible mets and odd looking area in left lung getting larger.
4/2/13--Biopsy of suspicious area in lower left lung. Mets to lung confirmed.
4/30/13 Begin Kadcyla/TDM-1
8/16/13 PET scan "mixed," with some areas of increased uptake, but also some definite improvement, so I'll stay on TDM-1/Kadcyla.
11/11/13 Finally get hormone receptor results from lung biopsy of 4/2/13. My cancer is no longer ER positive.
11/13/13 PET scan mixed results again. We're calling it "stable." Problems breathing on exertion.
2/18/14 PET scan shows a new lesion and newly active lymph node in chest, other progression. Bye bye TDM-1.
2/28/14 Begin Herceptin/Perjeta every 3 weeks.
6/8/14 PET "mixed," with no new lesions, and everything but lower lungs improving. My breathing is better.
8/18/14 PET "mixed" again. Upper lungs & one spine met stable, lower lungs less FDG avid, original tumor more avid, one lymph node in mediastinum more avid.
9/1/14 Begin taking Xeloda one week on, one week off. Will also stay on Herceptin and Perjeta every three weeks.
12/11/14 PET Scan--no new lesions, and everything looks better than it did.
3/20/15 PET Scan--no new lesions, but lower lung lesions larger and a bit more avid.
4/13/15 Increasing Xeloda dose to 10 days on, one week off.
7/1/15 Scan "mixed" again, but suggests continuing progression. Stop Xeloda. Substitute Abraxane every 3 weeks starting 7/13.
10/28/15 PET scan shows dramatic improvement everywhere. All lesions except lower lungs have resolved; lower lungs noticeably improved.
12/18/15 Last Abraxane. Continue on Herceptin and Perjeta alone beginning 1/8/16.
1/27/16 PET scan shows cancer is stable.
5/11/16 PET scan shows uptake in some areas that were resolved on the last two scans.
6/3/16 Begin Kadcyla and Tykerb combination
6/5 - 6/23 Horrible diarrhea from K&T together. Got pneumonia.
7/15/16 Begin Kadcyla only every 3 weeks.
9/6/16 Begin radiation therapy on right lung lesion that caused the pneumonia.
10/3/16 Last of 12 radiation treatments to right lung.
11/4/16 Huffing and puffing, low O2, high heart rate, on tiniest bit of exertion. Diagnosed as radiation pneumonitis. Treated with Prednisone.
11/11/16 PET scan shows significant improvement to radiated part of right lung BUT a bunch of new lung lesions, and the bone met is getting worse.
11/22/16 Begin Eribulin and Herceptin. H every 3 weeks. E two weeks on, one week off.
3/6/17 Scan shows progression in lungs. Bone met a little better.
3/23/17 Lung biopsy. Tumor sampled is ER-, PR+ (5%), HER2+++. Getting Herceptin and Perjeta as a maintenance treatment.
5/31/17 Port placement
6/1/17 Start Navelbine & Tykerb
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Old 06-04-2013, 05:55 PM   #7
karen z
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Re: AMAZING research immune treatment of primary causes mets2 melt away (even brn&lep

Thank you for this post.
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