Abstract

CTL-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4)-blocking monoclonal antibodies induce long-term regression of metastatic melanoma in some patients, but the exact mechanism is unknown. In this study, biopsies of selected accessible tumor lesions from patients treated with tremelimumab were examined to further elucidate the mechanism of its antitumor activity. Fifteen tumor biopsies from 7 patients who had been treated with tremelimumab (CP-675,206) were collected. Samples were analyzed for melanoma markers, immune cell subset markers, the presence of the T regulatory-specific transcription factor FoxP3 and the immunosuppressive enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO). Clinically responding lesions had diffuse intratumoral infiltrates of CD8(+) T cells that were markedly increased in cases where comparison with a baseline biopsy was available. Nonregressing lesions had sparse, patchy CD8(+) intratumoral infiltrates. Patients with regressing lesions had an increased frequency of CD8(+) cells with or without a concomitant increase in CD4(+) cells. Two of 3 responding patients with paired samples showed a slight increase in the number of FoxP3(+) cells in the postdosing biopsies. In patients with regressing lesions who had paired samples, the intensity of IDO staining in macrophages and/or melanoma cells showed no clear pattern of change postdosing. Administration of tremelimumab was associated with massive intratumoral infiltrates of CD8(+) CTLs in patients with regressing tumors but had varying effects on intratumoral infiltrates of CD4(+) and FoxP3(+) cells or intratumoral expression of IDO.

Highlights

  • CTL-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4)-blocking monoclonal antibodies induce long-term regression of metastatic melanoma in some patients, but the exact mechanism is unknown

  • These patients were selected from 89 patients who received tremelimumab at University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) between February 2002 and December 2006 because they had tumor biopsies available for analysis and provided written informed consent for analysis of biopsy material

  • We explored the possibility that the antitumor activity of tremelimumab may be mediated by the removal of cells expressing the transcription factor FoxP3, which has been reported to be preferentially expressed in human CD4+ T regulatory cells (Treg) [38] and in CD8+ T

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Summary

Introduction

CTL-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4)-blocking monoclonal antibodies induce long-term regression of metastatic melanoma in some patients, but the exact mechanism is unknown. In patients with regressing lesions who had paired samples, the intensity of IDO staining in macrophages and/or melanoma cells showed no clear pattern of change postdosing. Conclusions: Administration of tremelimumab was associated with massive intratumoral infiltrates of CD8+ CTLs in patients with regressing tumors but had varying effects on intratumoral infiltrates of CD4+ and FoxP3+ cells or intratumoral expression of IDO. CTL-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4)-blocking monoclonal antibodies can induce regression of tumors in mice (1 – 8) and humans (9 – 12). Two fully human CTLA4-blocking monoclonal antibodies are currently in clinical development, ipilimumab (formerly known as MDX-010 and BMS 184024) and tremelimumab (CP-675,206; formerly ticilimumab).

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