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A case report of clonal EBV-like memory CD4+ T cell activation in fatal checkpoint inhibitor-induced encephalitis.

Douglas B JohnsonWyatt J McDonnellPaula I Gonzalez EricssonRami N Al-RohilBret C MobleyJoe-Elie SalemDaniel Y WangVioleta SanchezYu WangCody A ChastainKristi BarkerYan LiangSarah WarrenJoseph M BeechemAlexander M MenziesMartin TioGeorgina V LongJustine V CohenAmanda C GuidonMéabh O'HareSunandana ChandraAkansha ChowdharyBénédicte Lebrun-VignesSimone M GoldingerElisabeth J RushingElizabeth I BuchbinderSimon A MallalChanjuan ShiYaomin XuJavid J MoslehiMelinda E SandersJeffrey A SosmanJustin M Balko
Published in: Nature medicine (2019)
Checkpoint inhibitors produce durable responses in numerous metastatic cancers, but immune-related adverse events (irAEs) complicate and limit their benefit. IrAEs can affect organ systems idiosyncratically; presentations range from mild and self-limited to fulminant and fatal. The molecular mechanisms underlying irAEs are poorly understood. Here, we report a fatal case of encephalitis arising during anti-programmed cell death receptor 1 therapy in a patient with metastatic melanoma. Histologic analyses revealed robust T cell infiltration and prominent programmed death ligand 1 expression. We identified 209 reported cases in global pharmacovigilance databases (across multiple cancer types) of encephalitis associated with checkpoint inhibitor regimens, with a 19% fatality rate. We performed further analyses from the index case and two additional cases to shed light on this recurrent and fulminant irAE. Spatial and multi-omic analyses pinpointed activated memory CD4+ T cells as highly enriched in the inflamed, affected region. We identified a highly oligoclonal T cell receptor repertoire, which we localized to activated memory cytotoxic (CD45RO+GZMB+Ki67+) CD4 cells. We also identified Epstein-Barr virus-specific T cell receptors and EBV+ lymphocytes in the affected region, which we speculate contributed to neural inflammation in the index case. Collectively, the three cases studied here identify CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as culprits of checkpoint inhibitor-associated immune encephalitis.
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