Khan Sujoy, Allsup David, Molica Stefano
Department of Immunology and Allergy, Castle Hill Hospital, Hull University Teaching Hospital National Health Service (NHS) Trust, Cottingham, United Kingdom.
Department of Haematology, Castle Hill Hospital, Hull University Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Cottingham, United Kingdom.
Front Oncol. 2023 Apr 6;13:1135812. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1135812. eCollection 2023.
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is a malignancy of clonally expanded antigen-switched, neoplastic, mature B cells. CLL is characterised by a variable degree of immunosuppression and secondary hypogammaglobulinemia. B-cell depleting therapies have historically been deployed with a proportion of patients becoming resistant to multiple lines of treatment with an associated worsening of immunosuppression and heightened infection risk. Advances in molecular diagnostics and the development of new therapies targeting Bruton's tyrosine kinase and B-cell lymphoma-2 have resulted in novel insights into the cellular mechanisms associated with an increased infection risk and T-cell escape from the complex tumour environment found in CLL. Generally, immunoglobulin replacement therapy with polyvalent human immunoglobulin G (IgG) is indicated in patients with recurrent severe bacterial infections and low IgG levels, but there is no consensus on the threshold IgG level for initiation of such therapy. A proportion of CLL patients have residual IgG production, with preserved quality of the immunoglobulin molecules, and therefore a definition of 'IgG quality' may allow for lower dosing or less frequent treatment with immunoglobulin therapy in such patients. Immunoglobulin therapy can restore innate immunity and in conjunction with CLL targeted therapies may allow T-cell antigen priming, restore T-cell function thereby providing an escape from tumour-associated autoimmunity and the development of an immune-mediated anti-tumour effect. This review aims to discuss the mechanisms by which CLL-targeted therapy may exert a synergistic therapeutic effect with immunoglobulin replacement therapy both in terms of reducing tumour bulk and restoration of immune function.
慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)是一种克隆性扩增的抗原转换型、肿瘤性成熟B细胞的恶性肿瘤。CLL的特征是不同程度的免疫抑制和继发性低丙种球蛋白血症。从历史上看,B细胞清除疗法已应用于一部分患者,但这些患者中有一部分会对多线治疗产生耐药性,同时免疫抑制会加重,感染风险也会增加。分子诊断学的进展以及针对布鲁顿酪氨酸激酶和B细胞淋巴瘤-2的新疗法的开发,使人们对与CLL中发现的感染风险增加和T细胞从复杂肿瘤环境中逃逸相关的细胞机制有了新的认识。一般来说,对于反复发生严重细菌感染且IgG水平低的患者,建议使用多价人免疫球蛋白G(IgG)进行免疫球蛋白替代治疗,但对于启动此类治疗的IgG阈值尚无共识。一部分CLL患者有残留的IgG产生,免疫球蛋白分子质量得以保留,因此,“IgG质量”的定义可能会使这类患者在免疫球蛋白治疗时减少剂量或降低治疗频率。免疫球蛋白治疗可以恢复先天免疫,与CLL靶向治疗联合使用时,可能会使T细胞抗原引发、恢复T细胞功能,从而摆脱肿瘤相关的自身免疫,产生免疫介导的抗肿瘤效应。本综述旨在讨论CLL靶向治疗与免疫球蛋白替代治疗在减少肿瘤体积和恢复免疫功能方面可能发挥协同治疗作用的机制。