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Patients with gastrointestinal irritability after TGN1412-induced cytokine storm displayed selective expansion of gut-homing αβ and γδT cells.

Neil E McCarthyAndrew J StaggClaire L PriceElizabeth R MannNichola L GellatlyHafid O Al-HassiStella C KnightNicki Panoskaltsis
Published in: Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII (2020)
Following infusion of the anti-CD28 superagonist monoclonal antibody TGN1412, three of six previously healthy, young male recipients developed gastrointestinal irritability associated with increased expression of 'gut-homing' integrin β7 on peripheral blood αβT cells. This subset of patients with intestinal symptoms also displayed a striking and persistent expansion of putative Vδ2+ γδT cells in the circulation which declined over a 2-year period following drug infusion, concordant with subsiding gut symptoms. These data demonstrate that TGN1412-induced gastrointestinal symptoms were associated with dysregulation of the 'gut-homing' pool of blood αβ and γδT cells, induced directly by the antibody and/or arising from the subsequent cytokine storm.
Keyphrases
  • high glucose
  • peripheral blood
  • diabetic rats
  • monoclonal antibody
  • drug induced
  • low dose
  • endothelial cells
  • sleep quality
  • physical activity
  • kidney transplantation
  • binding protein
  • stress induced