Abstract

BackgroundThe primary aim of this pilot study was to determine the feasibility and safety of an adoptive transfer and in vivo expansion of human haploidentical γδ T lymphocytes.MethodsPatients with advanced haematological malignancies who are not eligible for allogeneic transplantation received peripheral blood mononuclear cells from half-matched family donors. For that, a single unstimulated leukapheresis product was incubated with both the anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 antibodies conjugated to paramagnetic particles. The depletion procedure was performed on a fully automated CliniMACS® device according to the manufacturer’s instructions. On average, patients received 2.17 × 106/kg (range 0.9-3.48) γδ T cells with <1% CD4- or CD8-positive cells remaining in the product. All patients received prior lymphopenia-inducing chemotherapy (fludarabine 20-25 mg/m2 day -6 until day -2 and cyclophosphamide 30-60 mg/kg day -6 and -5) and were treated with 4 mg zoledronate on day 0 and 1.0x106 IU/m2 IL-2 on day +1 until day +6 for the induction of γδ T cell proliferation in vivo.ResultsThis resulted in a marked in vivo expansion of donor γδ T cells and, to a lower extent, natural killer cells and double-negative αβ T cells (mean 68-fold, eight-fold, and eight-fold, respectively). Proliferation peaked by around day +8 and donor cells persisted up to 28 days. Although refractory to all prior therapies, three out of four patients achieved a complete remission, which lasted for 8 months in a patient with plasma cell leukaemia. One patient died from an infection 6 weeks after treatment.ConclusionThis pilot study shows that adoptive transfer and in vivo expansion of haploidentical γδ T lymphocytes is feasible and suggests a potential role of these cells in the treatment of haematological diseases.

Highlights

  • For many patients with refractory haematological malignancies, allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) remains the only chance of a cure

  • Preservation of the function of γδ T cells was tested after separation by proliferation and cytotoxicity assays against different targets [13]

  • A significant number of αβ T cells remained in the transplant (0.7-2.06 × 106/kg), this fraction was primarily composed of CD4- and CD8-negative cells (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

For many patients with refractory haematological malignancies, allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) remains the only chance of a cure. Human γδ T cells recognise microbial antigens, but are capable of exerting significant MHCunrestricted activity against a broad spectrum of tumour cells in vitro, especially haematological neoplasia [6,7]. Their mechanism of target cell recognition is not fully understood, it is known that Vγ9Vδ2 T cells, which represent the vast majority of human circulating γδ T cells, recognise naturally occurring and synthetic phosphoantigens (i.e., aminobisphosphonates such as pamidronate or zoledronate) [8,9]. The primary aim of this pilot study was to determine the feasibility and safety of an adoptive transfer and in vivo expansion of human haploidentical γδ T lymphocytes

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