Abstract

Immune clearance of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is characterized by broad and robust antiviral T cell responses, while virus-specific T cells in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) are rare and exhibit immune exhaustion that includes programmed-death-1 (PD-1) expression on virus-specific T cells. Thus, an immunotherapy able to expand and activate virus-specific T cells may have therapeutic benefit for CHB patients. Like HBV-infected patients, woodchucks infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) can have increased hepatic expression of PD-1-ligand-1 (PD-L1), increased PD-1 on CD8+ T cells, and a limited number of virus-specific T cells with substantial individual variation in these parameters. We used woodchucks infected with WHV to assess the safety and efficacy of anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody therapy (αPD-L1) in a variety of WHV infection states. Experimentally-infected animals lacked PD-1 or PD-L1 upregulation compared to uninfected controls, and accordingly, αPD-L1 treatment in lab-infected animals had limited antiviral effects. In contrast, animals with naturally acquired WHV infections displayed elevated PD-1 and PD-L1. In these same animals, combination therapy with αPD-L1 and entecavir (ETV) improved control of viremia and antigenemia compared to ETV treatment alone, but with efficacy restricted to a minority of animals. Pre-treatment WHV surface antigen (sAg) level was identified as a statistically significant predictor of treatment response, while PD-1 expression on peripheral CD8+ T cells, T cell production of interferon gamma (IFN-γ) upon in vitro antigen stimulation (WHV ELISPOT), and circulating levels of liver enzymes were not. To further assess the safety of this strategy, αPD-L1 was tested in acute WHV infection to model the risk of liver damage when the extent of hepatic infection and antiviral immune responses were expected to be the greatest. No significant increase in serum markers of hepatic injury was observed over those in infected, untreated control animals. These data support a positive benefit/risk assessment for blockade of the PD-1:PD-L1 pathway in CHB patients and may help to identify patient groups most likely to benefit from treatment. Furthermore, the efficacy of αPD-L1 in only a minority of animals, as observed here, suggests that additional agents may be needed to achieve a more robust and consistent response leading to full sAg loss and durable responses through anti-sAg antibody seroconversion.

Highlights

  • Chronic Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) infection is a liver disease affecting approximately 250 million people globally, resulting in estimates nearing 1 million HBV-related deaths annually [1]

  • We wished to use the chronic woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) model to evaluate the potential benefit versus risk for treatment of Chronic Hepatitis B (CHB) patients with the human monoclonal antibody (HuMAb) αPD-L1, BMS936559, previously used in oncology studies (17)

  • We needed an antibody with reactivity to woodchuck PD-L1, as well as pharmacokinetics (PK) and effector function that would approximate the characteristics of BMS-936559 in humans

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) infection is a liver disease affecting approximately 250 million people globally, resulting in estimates nearing 1 million HBV-related deaths annually [1]. Patients successfully treated with nuc therapy still exhibit a higher incidence of severe liver disease than uninfected patients [6]. Interferonα (IFN-α) therapies can induce lifelong immunologic control of HBV in a small minority of treated patients. This ‘functional cure’ is hallmarked by clearance of circulating S antigen (HBs) and the development of anti-S antibodies (sAb). While the experience with IFN-α demonstrates that immunotherapy can achieve lasting control of HBV in CHB patients, typically less than 10% of patients achieve HBs loss within 3 years after initiating a 48 week regimen of IFN-α therapy [3,7,8], and serious side effects are associated with IFN-γ treatment [8]. Alternative immunotherapies with higher efficacy and better safety profiles are needed, and could be combined with nucs to maximize efficacy and minimize risks of immune-mediated liver damage or viral immune escape

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