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Blockade of IL-1β and PD-1 with combination chemotherapy reduces systemic myeloid suppression in metastatic pancreatic cancer with heterogeneous effects in the tumor.

Paul E ObersteinAndressa Dias CostaEmily A KawalerVictoire Cardot-RuffinoOsama E RahmaNina BeriHarshabad SinghThomas A AbramsLeah H BillerJames M ClearyPeter EnzingerBrandon M HuffmanNadine Jackson McClearyKimberley J PerezDouglas A RubinsonBenjamin L SchlechterRishi SuranaMatthew B YurgelunS Jennifer WangJoshua RemlandLauren K BraisNaima BollenrucherEugena ChangLestat R AliPatrick J LenehanIgor DolgalevGregor WerbaCibelle LimaC Elizabeth KehelerKeri M SullivanMichael L DouganCristina HajduMaya DajeeMarc R PelletierSaloney NazeerMatthew SquiresDafna Bar-SagiBrian M WolpinJonathan Andrew NowakDiane M SimeoneStephanie K Dougan
Published in: Cancer immunology research (2024)
Innate inflammation promotes tumor development, although the role of innate inflammatory cytokines in established human tumors is unclear. Here we report clinical and translational results from a phase Ib trial testing whether IL-1β blockade in human pancreatic cancer would alleviate myeloid immunosuppression and reveal antitumor T-cell responses to PD-1 blockade. Patients with treatment-naïve advanced pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (n=10) were treated with canakinumab, a high-affinity monoclonal human anti-interleukin-1β (IL-1β), the PD-1 blocking antibody spartalizumab, and gemcitabine/n(ab)paclitaxel. Analysis of paired peripheral blood from patients in the trial versus patients receiving multiagent chemotherapy showed a modest increase in HLA-DR+CD38+ activated CD8+ T cells and a decrease in circulating monocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) by flow cytometry for patients in the trial, but not in controls. Similarly, we used patient serum to differentiate monocytic MDSCs in vitro and showed that functional inhibition of T-cell proliferation was reduced when using on-treatment serum samples from patients in the trial but not when using serum from patients treated with chemotherapy alone. Within the tumor we observed few changes in suppressive myeloid-cell populations or activated T cells as assessed by single-cell transcriptional profiling or multiplex immunofluorescence, although increases in CD8+ T cells suggest that improvements in the tumor immune microenvironment might be revealed by a larger study. Overall, the data indicate that exposure to PD-1 and IL-1β blockade induced a modest reactivation of peripheral CD8+ T cells and decreased circulating monocytic MDSCs; however, these changes did not lead to similarly uniform alterations in the tumor microenvironment.
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