Title of article :
Autologous MUC1-specific Th1 effector cell immunotherapy induces differential levels of systemic TReg cell subpopulations that result in increased ovarian cancer patient survival
Author/Authors :
Dobrzanski، نويسنده , , Mark J. and Rewers-Felkins، نويسنده , , Kathleen A. and Quinlin، نويسنده , , Imelda S. and Samad، نويسنده , , Khaliquzzaman A. and Phillips، نويسنده , , Catherine A. and Robinson، نويسنده , , William and Dobrzanski، نويسنده , , David J. and Wright، نويسنده , , Stephen E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
20
From page :
333
To page :
352
Abstract :
Adoptive T cell immunotherapy using autologous lymphocytes is a viable treatment for patients with cancer and requires participation of Ag-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells. Here, we assessed the immunotherapeutic effects of autologous MUC1 peptide-stimulated CD4+ effector cells following adoptive transfer in patients with ovarian cancer. Using MUC1 peptide and IL-2 for ex vivo CD4+/Th1 effector cell generation, we show that three monthly treatment cycles of peripheral blood T cell restimulation and intraperitoneal re-infusion selectively modulated endogenous T cell-mediated immune responses that correlated with diminished serum CA125 tumor marker levels and enhanced patient survival. One patient remains disease-free, another patient survived long-term for nearly 16 months with recurrent disease and two patients expired within 3–5 months following final infusion. Although PBL from all patients showed elevated MUC1 cytolytic activity following therapy, such responses did not correlate with therapeutic efficacy. Long-term survivors showed elevated levels of systemic memory (CD45RO) and naïve (CD45RA) CD3/CD4/CD25+ T cells when compared to that of pre-treatment levels and similarly treated short-term survivors. Such cells co-expressed different levels of Foxp3 and CTLA-4 that resulted in progressively lower systemic Foxp3/CTLA-4 memory T cell ratios that further correlated with disease-free survival. Lastly, these patients showed elevated levels of MUC1-specific T cells expressing the CCR5 and CCR1 chemokine receptors and the chemokine CCL4 associated with Th1 cell differentiation/memory. We suggest that effective immunotherapy with autologous MUC1-stimulated CD4+ effector cells induces differential levels of systemic “Ag-experienced” and “Ag-inexperienced” CD4/CD25+ TReg cell subpopulations that influence long-term tumor immunity in ovarian cancer patients.
Keywords :
Tumor Immunity , Regulatory T cells , chemokines , Th1 effector cells , T effector/memory cells , Adoptive T cell immunotherapy
Journal title :
Clinical Immunology
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Clinical Immunology
Record number :
1854289
Link To Document :
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