Antiviral and antitumor T-cell immunity in patients treated with GM-CSF–coding oncolytic adenovirus

A Kanerva, P Nokisalmi, I Diaconu, A Koski… - Clinical Cancer …, 2013 - AACR
A Kanerva, P Nokisalmi, I Diaconu, A Koski, V Cerullo, I Liikanen, S Tähtinen, M Oksanen…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2013AACR
Purpose: Multiple injections of oncolytic adenovirus could enhance immunologic response.
In the first part of this article, the focus was on immunologic aspects. Sixty patients previously
naïve to oncolytic virus and who had white blood cells available were treated. Thirty-nine of
60 were assessed after a single virus administration, whereas 21 of 60 received a “serial
treatment” consisting of three injections within 10 weeks. In the second part, we focused on
115 patients treated with a granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM–CSF) …
Abstract
Purpose: Multiple injections of oncolytic adenovirus could enhance immunologic response. In the first part of this article, the focus was on immunologic aspects. Sixty patients previously naïve to oncolytic virus and who had white blood cells available were treated. Thirty-nine of 60 were assessed after a single virus administration, whereas 21 of 60 received a “serial treatment” consisting of three injections within 10 weeks. In the second part, we focused on 115 patients treated with a granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM–CSF)–coding capsid chimeric adenovirus, CGTG-102.
Results: Following serial treatment, both increase and decrease in antitumor T cells in blood were seen more frequently, findings which are compatible with induction of T-cell immunity and trafficking of T cells to tumors, respectively. Safety was good in both groups. In 115 patients treated with CGTG-102 (Ad5/3-D24-GMCSF), median overall survival was 111 days following single and 277 days after serial treatment in nonrandomized comparison. Switching the virus capsid for avoiding neutralizing antibodies in a serial treatment featuring three different viruses did not impact safety or efficacy. A correlation between antiviral and antitumor T cells was seen (P = 0.001), suggesting that viral oncolysis can result in epitope spreading and breaking of tumor-associated immunologic tolerance. Alternatively, some patients may be more susceptible to induction of T-cell immunity and/or trafficking.
Conclusions: These results provide the first human data linking antiviral immunity with antitumor immunity, implying that oncolytic viruses could have an important role in cancer immunotherapy. Clin Cancer Res; 19(10); 2734–44. ©2013 AACR.
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