Abstract

e14635 Background: Lenalidomide is an immunomodulatory and anti-angiogenic agent that has demonstrated activity against a range of hematological malignancies. Despite evidence of direct anti-proliferative activity against hematological cells in vitro, there is no evidence of single agent direct activity against solid tumor cells in vitro. To take advantage of its known immune-enhancing properties alongside direct anti-tumor agents, lenalidomide is being advanced in solid tumor indications in combination with other agents. There are few data regarding the combination of lenalidomide and standard of care chemotherapeutic agents, such as gemcitabine. Methods: Here, we assess the effects of lenalidomide alone, and in combination with gemcitabine, on pancreatic cancer cell growth and survival, and the ability of lenalidomide to enhance the ability of human PBMC to kill allogeneic pancreatic tumor cells (BxPC3, PANC-1 and MiaPaCa) in a PBMC:tumor cell co-culture model. Results: Lenalidomide alone had no effect on the proliferation of pancreatic cancer cells (BxPC-3 and Panc-1) whereas gemcitabine had moderate anti-proliferative activity. With combination therapy there was clear synergistic enhancement of anti-proliferative activity in both cell lines and additive effects were observed in a BxPC-3 xenograft mouse model of pancreatic cancer. About 20% of tumor cells were sensitive to immune-mediated cell death and, for BxPC3, this was increased significantly in the presence of lenalidomide. Lenalidomide significantly and dose-dependently enhanced immune-mediated killing (both T and NK cells are required for tumor cell killing in this model). For PANC-1 and MiaPaCa, immune-mediated killing was also increased by lenalidomide, albeit non-significantly. Conclusions: These results suggest that, in addition to anti-angiogenic and other effects within the tumor microenvironment, lenalidomide may act as an immune adjuvant to enhance the recognition and apoptosis of tumor cells by host T and NK cells. These studies support the potential utility of lenalidomide in combination with chemotherapeutic agents, gemcitabine in particular, in the treatment of patients with solid tumors including pancreatic cancer. [Table: see text]

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