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Immunotherapy in Multiple Myeloma: where do we go ? Paul Moss Birmingham, UK Outline • Introduction to immunotherapy • Immunotherapy in the setting of Myeloma • Cellular therapy • Future application History of Cancer Therapy • Surgery – 1000s of years • Radiotherapy – 100+ years • Chemotherapy – 70+ years • Immunotherapy William Coley (1862-1932) • Sarcoma surgeon • Noticed that a patient with severe skin infection developed a long term remission from disease • Developed live and killed extracts of Streptococcus and Serratia and treated 1000+ cancer patients Treatment was controversial at the time The idea Tumour cell T cell or NK cell recognises and kills tumour cell Evidence for importance of immune system in control of cancer • Cancer creates an Immunosuppressive microenvironment • Tumour cells often lose expression of HLA molecules that cells use to ‘present’ antigen to the immune system – They are ‘escaping’ immune recognition – 50% of Diffuse Large B cell Lymphomas have lost HLA • Tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are associated with regression of tumours • Il-2 can sometimes have anti-tumour effects Is there evidence that patients make an immune response to myeloma ? • Spontaneous clinical remissions are very rare • No strong evidence for HLA class I downregulation • Il-2 is not effective – So not encouraging ? Patients with MGUS make T cell immune responses to tumour that are lost in MM Dhodapkar et al 2004 Perhaps immunotherapy underlies current management of myeloma ? • • • • • ImiDs Monoclonal antibodies Chemotherapy ? Autograft Allograft Autograft • Clinical outcomes are better in patients who exhibit increased lymphocyte response in the early post-transplant period • Rarely curative – Does this indicate complete lack of MM-specific immune response or – is this response suppressed in MM patients ? • (this question can now be addressed through checkpoint blockade) Allograft • Potentially curative but remains associated with considerable morbidity and mortality • Remissions are often associated with considerable graft versus host disease • This may suggest that the specificity of the immune response is alloreactive Comparison of alloreactive and tumourspecific immune response P D D 1. Alloreactive P T cell response D 2. Tumour-specific P D T cell response Tumour cell Minor histocompatibility antigens HLA Class I D R Syngeneic (identical) twins are generally not good donors for allografts • Genetically the same • There cannot be a significant minor histocompatibility antigen-specific responses • Presumably this stops the graft versus leukaemia response ….? Syngeneic transplantation in multiple myeloma • 25 cases – 17 entered complete remission • 4 cases of GvHD • Comparable results to HLA-identical sibling Gharton et al, 1999 Does this give us hope ? • Perhaps patients with paraproteinaemia DO make an immune response to the tumour • This helps to keep the disease in check • However, when there is loss of immune control, any form of current conventional (autologous) therapy cannot overcome this • Perhaps the immune response of another person can still gain control (an allograft) How can we improve immunotherapy in MM ? Broad approaches to immunotherapy • Cell therapy • Checkpoint blockade • Vaccination • Others – Reversal of immune suppressive micro-environment – Antibodies to retarget T cells to tumours (BiTe) Cell therapy in Myeloma • Expanding autologous T cells in the laboratory and re-infusing them • Redirecting these T cells to see an ‘antigen’ on the myeloma cells – Neoantigen – Cancer Testis Antigen • Chimeric antigen receptor therapy Infusion of bone marrow derived T cells • Isolate 200ml bone marrow • Use mitogenic beads to expand marrow infiltrating lymphocytes (MIL) • Achieved 109 T cells within 1 week • Infuse these at day 3 after melphalan-conditioned CD34+ selected autograft • Noonan et al. Sci Tsl Med. 2015 Conclusions • Marrow infiltrating T cells can be expanded in virtually all patients • No significant side effects • Some encouraging signs of efficacy It would be much better if we knew what our target was ”Ehrlich- On Immunity with Special Reference to Cell Life” Royal Society 1900 Tumour cell T cell or NK cell Tumour cell T cell or NK cell What are the antigens that are recognised in a myeloma-specific immune response ? • Neo-epitopes – Peptides that are derived from mutations in the cancer clone • Cancer Testis Antigens – Proteins that are expressed only in fetal cells and then again in tumour cells • Idiotype – The unique immunoglobulin on the tumour cell • Proteins in plasma cells – that are expressed relatively specifically on plasma cells Neo-antigens • The concept.. – tumours acquire mutations – These code for the synthesis of proteins that contain mutated amino acids – these are presented by HLA molecules • The immune can recognise these can kill the cancer cell This is currently believed to be the major mechasism by which checkpoint blockade works Indeed, tumours with lots of mutations appear to respond well to immunotherapy Kandoth et al. Nature 2013 Neo-antigens in myeloma • Poorly characterised • These may emerge from the current studies of checkpoint blockade to ‘boost’ endogenous immune responses Cancer Testis Antigens • These are proteins that are expressed in germ cells but not in adult cells • They are re-expressed in tumours Why ? A bit of evolution.. 3,500 MYA 700 MYA The germ cell and the soma Germ cell The body (Soma) Germ cell Cancer occurs when the soma loses control of growth Germ cell The cancer cells express proteins expressed in the germ cells This allows the immune system to recognise that ‘something is wrong’ MAGE-1 immunohistochemistry stain of human testis – Old LJ (2003) Cancer testis antigens are expressed in germ cells and tumours testis trophoblast ovary Bladder cancer Cancer testis antigens are important in Melanoma (A) (B) (C) Evolution of skin metastases on the leg of patient EB81 during treatment. (A) Before vaccination (B) After four vaccinations with ALVAC (after 3 months) (C) After 10 months van Baren N et al 2005 T cells against CTAg are indeed present in patients with multiple myeloma Oliver Goodyear et al. Blood 2005;106:4217-4224 They kill tumour cells However, these CD8+ immune responses may not be protective T cell therapy against cancer testis antigens in patients with myeloma • T cell therapy was used after autograft • Autologous T cells were transduced with a high affinity T cell receptor against an NY-ESO peptide presented by HLA-A2 • Average 2 billion T cells were infused at day 2 Tumour cell • Rapoport, Nat Med, 2015 T cell or NK cell 20 patients treated PFS 19 months 16 responses - CR/nCR in 14 - VGPR in 2 Antigen escape seen in 2 1% T cells present at 180 days Persistence of T cells was negatively correlated with NY-ESO in marrow Targeting cancer testis antigens in myeloma • Rather weak immune responses so difficult to study • Gene transfer technology may allow more effective targeting What peptides are actually expression on the surface of myeloma cells ? Tumour cell • It is now possible to: – isolate tumour cells – Purify HLA molecules – Pull out the peptides and sequence them Two arms to embrace the oncopeptidome. Jacques Neefjes Blood 2015;126:1154-1156 HLA expression is high on myeloma cells Simon Walz et al. Blood 2015;126:1203-1213 ©2015 by American Society of Hematology A wide range of myeloma-associated peptides were found Simon Walz et al. Blood 2015;126:1203-1213 T cell responses against these peptides were found in the patients Simon Walz et al. Blood 2015;126:1203-1213 Conclusions • There was no evidence of mutated peptides on the surface of myeloma cells • Cancer testis antigen peptides were present • Majority of MM-associated peptide were normal somatic cell proteins • The immune response was responding to these – More hope for checkpoint blockade.. Chimeric antigen receptors Tumour has lost HLA or proteins that had been seen by immune system But, still expresses e.g. CD19 Chimeric antigen receptors Tumour has lost HLA or proteins that had been seen by immune system But, still expresses CD19 “CD19” killing Acute leukaemia expresses CD19 “CAR” T cells Emily Whitehead - “The girl that lived” Third generation CARs have transformed clinical outcomes Rotolo et al. 2016 Clinical success of CAR therapy • Excellent results through targeting of CD19 – – – – treatment of relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia 89% CR, within 3 weeks, not related to tumour burden Excellent in primary refractory disease – all 9 CRs Somewhat less effective in lymphoma Challenges of CAR therapy • Personalised cell therapy – Expensive and challenging • Relapse can occur due to loss of target molecule – e.g. CD19-negative ALL • May need lymphodepletion – e.g. fludarabine/cyclophosphamide conditioning • Toxicity – Neutotoxicity – Off-target recognition Targets for CAR therapy in myeloma • BCMA • CD19 • CD138 – N=5, low dose, 3 SD ? escape • CD44v6 • CD38 • CD56 BCMA • B cell maturation antigen – TNFRSF17 • Provides survival signal to plasma cell • Present on plasma cells and some B cells • Also plasmacytoid dendritic cells • Antibodies to BCMA have been seen in patients achieving CR after allo transplant CAR against BCMA in patients with myeloma • 12 patients treated • Conditioning 300mg/m2 cyclophosphamide for 3 days (900mg) 30mg/m2 of fludarabine for 3 days 0.3 x 106/Kg escalating to 1, 3 and 9 -gave T cells 3 days after conditioning Around 67% if T cells expressed CAR at infusion CAR-BCMA T cells specifically recognized BCMA in vitro and exhibited antimyeloma activity in humans. Syed Abbas Ali et al. Blood 2016;128:1688-1700 ©2016 by American Society of Hematology Patient 10 entered a stringent complete remission. +4 weeks +8 weeks Syed Abbas Ali et al. Blood 2016;128:1688-1700 ©2016 by American Society of Hematology MM was eliminated from the bone marrow of patient 11 after CAR-BCMA infusion. Syed Abbas Ali et al. Blood 2016;128:1688-1700 ©2016 by American Society of Hematology Patients with the most impressive antimyeloma responses had the highest levels of blood CAR-BCMA+ cells. Syed Abbas Ali et al. Blood 2016;128:1688-1700 ©2016 by American Society of Hematology Review of BCMA-specific CAR • Responses were not durable – 2 x VGPR – 1 x CR which lasted for 17 weeks – Low level expression of BCMA – Soluble BCMA • Significant toxicity • Short term (3 month) persistence of CAR T cells Enormous potential for immunotherapy Lots more targets in the immuno-suppressive microenvironment Summary • Weak evidence of cancer-specific immunity in MM • Peptide targets are being identified • These can now be targeted with cell therapy or vaccination • Combination with immuno-modulatory drugs is likely to be very powerful Future role of cell therapy in management of myeloma • We are moving to a ‘chemotherapy-free’ world in cancer treatment – when not if • Combinations of: – Checkpoint blockade – Vaccines or CAR – Immune modulators Haabeth, 2014 Functional analysis of short-term T-cell cultures. Oliver Goodyear et al. Blood 2005;106:4217-4224 ©2005 by American Society of Hematology Serial analysis of CGAg-specific CD8+ T-cell responses in 11 patients with multiple myeloma. Oliver Goodyear et al. Blood 2005;106:4217-4224 ©2005 by American Society of Hematology Event-free survival in 30 children and adults treated with CTL019 therapy. Of this group, 5 patients who entered a CR went on to further therapy, 3 of whom received an allogeneic bone marrow transplant. The fourth had refractory Tcell ALL aberrantly expressing CD19, entered remission after CTL019, and subsequently underwent donor lymphocyte infusion. She remains in remission >1 year later. The fifth patient developed myelodysplastic syndrome and received therapy for this condition (this was scored as an event, but she did receive further therapy in ALL remission and was counted among the 5). The rest have not received further therapy to consolidate their remissions. EFS, event-free survival. Figure adapted from Maude et al26 with permission Nonchemotherapeutic agents in the treatment of indolent lymphoma. mAbs can be directed against B-cell surface antigens such as CD20, which is expressed by tumor cells and mediates complement, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity or direct cell deat... Emmanuel Bachy, and Gilles Salles Clin Cancer Res 2014;20:5226-5239 ©2014 by American Association for Cancer Research PD-1 and PD-L expression • PD-1 expressed during thymic development and induced in a variety of haemopoietic cells in the periphery through antigen receptor signaling and cytokines • PD-L1 and PD-L2 are ligands of PD-1. • PD-L2 expression limited to DCs, macrophages, peritoneal B cells, memory B cells • PD-L1 is broadly distributed on both haemopoietic and non-haemopoietic cells • Constitutively expressed on lymphoid and myeloid cells and further upregulated upon activation. • PD-L1 can be expressed on a wide range of non-haemopoietic cells in epithelial, vascular endothelial, pancreatic, and immune-privileged sites, such as the eye and placenta • Expression of PD-L1 and PD-L2 can be regulated by inflammatory milieu. Cytokines are potent stimulators Mechanism of action of Elotuzumab Weisel K et al. 2015 Interactions between multiple myeloma (MM) cells and the bone marrow (BM) niche. Adhesion of MM cells to BM stromal cells is mediated by cell-adhesion molecules including vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) and integrin α-4 (VLA-4). This adhesion triggers secretion of cytokines, such as VEGF and IL-6, from both MM cells and BM stromal cells. Both of these cytokines stimulate the growth of MM cells and development of the neo-vasculature. Endothelial cells, in turn, secrete more VEGF, IL-6, and IGF-1, further enhancing growth and survival of MM cells. Furthermore, receptor activator of NFκB ligand (RANKL) is produced by BM stromal cells and stimulates osteoclastogenesis. In contrast, osteoblast differentiation is inhibited by Dickkopf-1 (DKK-1), which is produced by MM cells. MM cells also secrete metalloproteases, such as MMP-2, resulting in degradation of the BM niche. While inhibition of osteoblastogenesis promotes osteolysis, degradation of the BM environment further enhances homing of the MM cells Al-Hudaily et al, 2016 Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) therapy for multiple myeloma British Journal of Haematology Volume 172, Issue 5, pages 685-698, 20 JAN 2016 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.13889 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bjh.13889/full#bjh13889-fig-0002 Identification of T cell responses against cancer • Boon et al analysed anti-tumoral T cell responses in patients with a melanoma that was undergoing regression • Identified T cell clones that could kill tumour • Frequencies of antitumor T cells ranging from 3 × 10− 5 to 10−3 of CD8 T cells were observed in a group of six patients. • What did the T cells recognise ? Functional analysis of short-term T-cell cultures. Oliver Goodyear et al. Blood 2005;106:4217-4224 ©2005 by American Society of Hematology Comparative HLA ligandome profiling and identification of myeloma-associated antigens. Simon Walz et al. Blood 2015;126:1203-1213 ©2015 by American Society of Hematology Identification of synergistic HLA class II–restricted myeloma-associated antigens. Simon Walz et al. Blood 2015;126:1203-1213 ©2015 by American Society of Hematology Perhaps it has always been about immunotherapy ? • When we cure patients with acute leukaemia with the use of chemotherapy… – Can we really kill off 100,000,000,000 cells with 4 courses of chemotherapy ? • Perhaps chemotherapy just resets the immune system.. 59 yo female with lung adenocarcinoma. LUL lobectomy November 2012 ; then adjuvant chemotherapy till April 2013, then pleural effusion September 2013 December 2013 February 2014 Neo-antigens in myeloma • Poorly characterised • These may emerge from the current studies of checkpoint blockade to ‘boost’ endogenous immune responses CAR-BCMA T cells became more differentiated after infusion. Syed Abbas Ali et al. Blood 2016;128:1688-1700 ©2016 by American Society of Hematology