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Reversing Immune Dysfunction in Cancer Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH curielt_at_uthscsa.edu Professor of Medicine UT Health Science Center San Antonio, TX – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH


1
Reversing Immune Dysfunction in Cancer
  • Tyler J. Curiel, MD, MPH
  • curielt_at_uthscsa.edu
  • Professor of Medicine
  • UT Health Science Center
  • San Antonio, TX

2
Outline
  • Introduction to tumor immunity
  • Limitations of the prevailing cancer drug
    development approach
  • Failures of the prevailing tumor immunotherapy
    strategies
  • The new immunotherapy paradigm and its
    translational predictions and approaches

3
Louis Pasteur 1822-1895
  • Germ theory of immunity 1878

First demonstration of acquired immunity with
chicken cholera 1880
4
Immune surveillance and tumors
  • Increased cancer in immunosuppressed hosts
  • Spontaneous cancer remissions, especially in
    renal cell carcinoma and melanoma
  • Demonstration of tumor-specific immunity
  • J Nat CA Inst 195718769
  • Tumors express antigens
  • Nature 304, 165-7 (1983)


5
? Is there definitive proof of naturally-occurrin
g immunity against cancers? ? Could immune
therapy for cancer (of any kind) ever
work?
The overarching questions
? For which cancers? At what stages?
? What approaches will work?
6
Tumor Immune Surveillance Exists. Shankaran V,
Ikeda H, Bruce AT, White JM, Swanson PE, Old LJ,
Schreiber RD IFN-? and lymphocytes prevent
primary tumour development and shape tumour
immunogenicity. Nature. 2001 410(6832)1107-11
Punch Line T cells, IFN-? and adaptive (antigen
specific) immunity are key elements in defense
against tumors
7
Current tumor immunotherapy paradigms build on
infectious disease principles that may not apply
to cancer T. Curiel J Clin Invest,
117(5)1167-1174 2007
8
One answer give more T cells
  • Rosenberg, S.A., Spiess, P. Lafreniere, R. A
    new approach to the adoptive immunotherapy of
    cancer with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes.
    Science 233, 1318-21 (1986).
  • LAK cells. Rosenberg, S.A. et al. N Engl J Med
    316, 889-897 (1987)
  • Morgan, R.A., et al. Cancer regression in
    patients after transfer of genetically engineered
    lymphocytes. Science (2006).

9
  • Nature Medicine 1996 2(1)52-58 F. Hsu, et al.
  • B-cell lymphoma, autologous antigen-pulsed
    dendritic cells
  • Nature Medicine 1998 4(3)328
  • F. Nestle, et al.
  • Melanoma, peptide- or tumor lysate-pulsed
    dendritic cells

10
Intrinsic tumor strategies
  • Hide the tumor
  • Reduce class I
  • Reduce TAA
  • Defective Ag processing
  • Reduce co-signaling
  • Grow in privileged sites
  • Prevent active immunity
  • Prevent cell ingress
  • Promote cell egress
  • Kill immune cells
  • Miscellaneous
  • Resist apoptosis

- Alter cell differentiation
11
DC subsets
12
Tumors reprogram dendritic cells to defeat host
immunity, not the tumor
Zou, Curiel, et al., Nature Medicine 2001
7(12)1339-1346
13
Tumor plasmacytoid DCgenerate IL-10 T cells
Zou, Curiel, et al., Nature Medicine 2001
7(12)1339-1346 .
14
Tumor myeloid DC induce IL-10 T cells through
B7-H1 signals
Curiel, Zou, et al., Nature Medicine 2003
9(5)562-567
VEGF and IL-10 from the tumor induce B7-H1
expression
15
Immune recognition of tumor antigens as self is a
significant problem.
  • Infection rapidly dividing cells of external
    origin.

Cancer rapidly dividing cells of internal
origin. The tumor is a part of the host (self).
16
The big problem
  • Anti-tumor immunity is autoimmunity.
  • To generate significant anti-tumor immunity
    requires breaking self tolerance.

17
Blood, LN, BM, spleen Peripheral tolerance
Thymus Negative selection Central tolerance
CD4CD25 Treg
Naïve thymocytes
Normal repertoire
18
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are CD4CD25hi T cells
  • Treg depletion improves endogenous immunity
  • Shimizu, J., et al. J Immunol 163, 5211-8 (1999)

Treg depletion improves actively-induced
immunity Steitz, J., et al. Cancer Res 61,
8643-6 (2001) Sutmuller, et al. J Exp Med 194,
823-32 (2001)
19
(No Transcript)
20
Six fundamental hallmarks of cancer Hanahan and
Weinberg 2000. Cell 10057-70
21
The seventh fundamental hallmark of cancer Dunn,
G.P., Old, L.J., and Schreiber, R.D. 2004. Annu
Rev Immunol 22329-360.Zitvogel, L., Tesniere,
A., and Kroemer, G. 2006. Nat Rev Immunol
6715-727.T. J. Curiel. 2007 J Clin Invest,
117(5)1167-1174.
Evading apoptosis
22
FOXP3 Tregs in tumors
Curiel, Zou, et al. Nature Medicine 10, 942-949
(2004)
23
Tumor Tregs allow tumor growth despite otherwise
sufficient numbers of functional anti-tumor
effectors cells
Curiel, Zou, et al. Nature Medicine 10, 942-949
(2004)
IL-2
24
Curiel, Zou, et al. 2004 Nature Medicine 10,
942-949
Tumor Tregs allow tumor growth despite otherwise
sufficient numbers of functional anti-tumor
effector cells
IL-2
25
Elevated tumor CD4CD25 T cells predict poor
survival in ovarian cancer
Curiel, Zou , et al. Nature Medicine 10, 942-949
(2004)
1.0
Low Treg 66.4 mos High Treg 12.8
mos Plt0.0001
0.8
0.6
Survival
low Treg
0.4
medium Treg
0.2
high Treg
0.0
0
20
40
60
80
100
Months
26
CD4CD25 CTCL cell
CD4CD25 Treg
27
Patient DT µg/kg Age in years Gender Tumor type Prior treatments
1 9 59 F ovarian S, C
2 9 41 F breast HT, C
3 9 50 M lung C, RT
4 12 53 F ovarian C, RT, S
5 12 31 F ovarian C, S
6 12 36 F ovarian C, S
7 12 72 M pancreatic C, HT, S
28
Denileukin diftitox depletesTregs in cancer
patients
29
Denileukin diftitox increases blood
IFN-?-producing T cells in cancer patients
30
Patient 4
  • Stage IV (metastatic) ovarian cancer.
  • First recipient of the dose-escalated 12 µg/kg,
    with significant immune response.
  • Because she had measurable disease, she received
    six additional denileukin diftitox doses to test
    clinical efficacy.

31
Denileukin diftitox reduces metastatic tumor in
treatment-refractory ovarian cancer
4 months
32
Corroborating trials
  • Ovarian Barnett, B., Kryczek, I., Cheng, P.,
    Zou, W. Curiel, T.J. Am J Reprod Immunol
    54369-377 2005
  • Renal cell Dannull, J., et al. The Journal of
    Clinical Investigation 1153623-3633 2005
  • Melanoma Mahnke, K., et al. Int J Cancer 120
    2723-33 2007
  • Melanoma Rasku, M. A, et al. J. Translational
    Med, 6122008

33
Even when the system works,tumors can
developThe Three Es of Cancer
ImmunoeditingR. Schreiber Annu Rev Immunol
33329 2004
Fig L. Zitvogel et al., Nature Reviews
Immunology 6, 715-727 (October 2006)
34
Salvaging DT failure in ovarian cancer
S. Wall, S. Thibodeaux, T. Curiel, et al., in
preparation
Patient SAOC03
35
Interferon-a improves Treg depletion and DT
efficacy in ovarian cancer
S. Wall, S. Thibodeaux, T. Curiel, et al., in
preparation
Patient SAOC03
36
How IFN-a boostsTreg depletion effects
  • Directly activates CD8 T cells
  • Boosts T cell-activating capacity of dendritic
    cells
  • Increases T cell trafficking into tumor
  • Does NOT appear to affect Treg function or
    regeneration after depletion

37
Special cases
  • Sex
  • Age

38
Females respond better to anti-B7-H1 blockade in
B16 melanoma
b
80
p0.017
60
68.0
Suppression ()
40
90.8
20
0
11
10.5
EffTreg ratio
WT isotype
WT isotype
WT ?B7-H1
WT ?B7-H1
p0.009
6
p0.028
4
Total number of tumor-specific CD8 cells (105)
p0.013
2
0
39
Sex differences in female Tregs
  • B7-H1-dependent reduction in Treg function
  • B7-H1 effects are estrogen-dependent
  • Functional differences are due to defective
    mTOR/PTEN signaling
  • Treg function is rescued with dendritic cell
    B7-H1 signals, estrogen withdrawal or rapamycin

40
Treg depletion does not work in aged female mice
with B16
41
Aged female mice have more CD11bGr-1 myeloid
suppressors that are more suppressive than young
42
Depleting Gr-1 cells improves tumor immunity and
slows B16 in aged females
B
p0.019
4
p0.21
3
Percent IFN? of CD8 T cells in spleen
2
1
0
no tumor
control mAb
?-Gr-1 mAb
?-Gr-1 mAb
control mAb
young
aged
43
Summary and conclusions
  • Cancers are immunogenic and thus should be
    amenable to effective immune therapies in the new
    paradigm.
  • Immune therapies are adjuncts in multi-modal
    treatment approaches.
  • Immune therapy is not appropriate for all
    patients.

44
Ways forward
  • Identify patients with relatively intact immune
    systems for trials
  • Test available agents DT, anti-CTLA-4
  • Test reversing immune dysfunction with
    immunization or immune boost (e.g., anti-CTLA-4
    or DT plus a vaccine)

45
Final Thoughts
  • We need a better understanding of immune
    dysfunction in cancer.
  • We need a better understanding of the immune
    effects of current agents.
  • Willingness of investigators to try immune
    therapies will help, but they have to be
    convinced.

46
Acknowledgements
  • Curiel lab members
  • National Cancer Institute
  • Hayes, Voelcker, Rippel Foundations and Trusts,
    Eisai
  • UTHSCSA endowments
  • Cancer Therapy Research Center
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