Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster Study Group and.
Division of Stem Cell Transplantation and Immunotherapy, Department of Medicine II, Christian Albrechts University Kiel and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Germany.
Blood. 2017 Sep 28;130(13):1543-1552. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-01-764316. Epub 2017 Jul 11.
Antibody therapy constitutes a major advance in the treatment of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL). To evaluate the efficacy and the mechanisms of action of CD19 monoclonal antibody therapy in pediatric BCP-ALL, we tested an Fc-engineered CD19 antibody carrying the S239D/I332E mutation for improved effector cell recruitment (CD19-DE). Patient-derived xenografts (PDX) of pediatric mixed-lineage leukemia gene ()-rearranged ALL were established in NOD.Cg-Prkdc Il2rg/SzJ (NSG) mice. Antibody CD19-DE was efficient in prolonging the survival of NSG mice in a minimal residual disease (MRD) model. The majority of surviving mice remained polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-MRD negative after treatment. When antibody therapy was initiated in overt leukemia, antibody CD19-DE was still efficient in prolonging survival of xenografted mice in comparison with nontreated control animals, but the effects were less pronounced than in the MRD setting. Importantly, the combination of antibody CD19-DE and cytoreduction by chemotherapy (dexamethasone, vincristine, PEG-asparaginase) resulted in significantly improved survival rates in xenografted mice. Antibody CD19-DE treatment was also efficient in a randomized phase 2-like PDX trial using 13 -rearranged BCP-ALL samples. Macrophage depletion by liposomal clodronate resulted in a reversal of the beneficial effects of CD19-DE, suggesting an important role for macrophages as effector cells. In support of this finding, CD19-DE was found to enhance phagocytosis of patient-derived ALL blasts by human macrophages in vitro. Thus, Fc-engineered CD19 antibodies may represent a promising treatment option for infants and children with -rearranged BCP-ALL who have a poor outcome when treated with chemotherapy only.
抗体疗法是治疗 B 细胞前体急性淋巴细胞白血病(BCP-ALL)的重大进展。为了评估 CD19 单克隆抗体疗法在儿科 BCP-ALL 中的疗效和作用机制,我们测试了一种携带 S239D/I332E 突变以改善效应细胞募集的 Fc 工程化 CD19 抗体(CD19-DE)。建立了具有混合谱系白血病基因()重排的小儿 ALL 的患者来源异种移植物(PDX)在 NOD.Cg-Prkdc Il2rg/SzJ(NSG)小鼠中。在微小残留病(MRD)模型中,CD19-DE 抗体有效地延长了 NSG 小鼠的存活时间。治疗后,大多数存活的小鼠仍为聚合酶链反应(PCR)-MRD 阴性。当在明显的白血病中开始抗体治疗时,与未治疗的对照动物相比,CD19-DE 抗体仍能有效地延长异种移植小鼠的存活时间,但效果不如 MRD 情况下明显。重要的是,CD19-DE 抗体与化疗(地塞米松、长春新碱、PEG-天冬酰胺酶)的细胞减少相结合,可显著提高异种移植小鼠的存活率。在使用 13 重排 BCP-ALL 样本的随机 2 期样 PDX 试验中,CD19-DE 治疗也有效。脂质体氯膦酸盐对巨噬细胞的耗竭导致 CD19-DE 的有益作用逆转,表明巨噬细胞作为效应细胞的重要作用。支持这一发现,CD19-DE 被发现可增强人巨噬细胞对患者来源的 ALL blasts 的吞噬作用。因此,Fc 工程化 CD19 抗体可能代表一种有前途的治疗选择,用于仅接受化疗治疗预后不良的具有 重排的 BCP-ALL 婴儿和儿童。