Tumor Regression Following Engineered Polyomavirus-Specific T Cell Therapy in Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor-Refractory Merkel Cell Carcinoma
Asano, Y.; Veatch, J.; McAfee, M.; Bakhtiari, J.; Lee, B.; Martin, L.; Zhang, S.; Mazziotta, F.; Paulson, K. G.; Schmitt, T. M.; Munkbhat, A.; Young, C.; Seaton, B.; Hunter, D.; Horst, N.; Lindberg, M.; Miller, N.; Stone, M.; Bielas, J.; Koelle, D.; Viollet, V.; Gottardo, R.; Gooley, T.; Oda, S.; Greenberg, P. D.; Nghiem, P.; Chapuis, A. G.
Show abstract
Although immune check-point inhibitors (CPIs) revolutionized treatment of Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), patients with CPI-refractory MCC lack effective therapy. More than 80% of MCC express T-antigens encoded by Merkel cell polyomavirus, which is an ideal target for T-cell receptor (TCR)-based immunotherapy. However, MCC often repress HLA expression, requiring additional strategies to reverse the downregulation for allowing T cells to recognize their targets. We identified TCRMCC1 that recognizes a T-antigen epitope restricted to human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*02:01. Seven CPI-refractory metastatic MCC patients received CD4 and CD8 T cells transduced with TCRMCC1 (TTCR-MCC1) preceded either by lymphodepleting chemotherapy or an HLA-upregulating regimen (single-fraction radiation therapy (SFRT) or systemic interferon gamma (IFN{gamma})) with concurrent avelumab. Two patients who received preceding SFRT and IFN{gamma} respectively experienced tumor regression. One experienced regression of 13/14 subcutaneous lesions with 1 escape lesion and the other had delayed tumor regression in all lesions after initial progression. Although TTCR-MCC1 cells with an activated phenotype infiltrated tumors including the escape lesion, all progressing lesions transcriptionally lacked HLA expression. While SFRT/IFN{gamma} did not immediately upregulate tumor HLA expression, a secondary endogenous antigen-specific T cell infiltrate was detected in one of the regressing tumors and associated with HLA upregulation, indicating in situ immune responses have the potential to reverse HLA downregulation. Indeed, supplying a strong co-stimulatory signal via a CD200R-CD28 switch receptor allows TTCR-MCC1 cells to control HLA-downregulated MCC cells in a xenograft mouse model, upregulating HLA expression. Our results demonstrate the potential of TCR gene therapy for metastatic MCC and propose a next strategy for overcoming epigenetic downregulation of HLA in MCC.
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