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Macrophage-derived CXCL9 and CXCL11, T-cell skin homing, and disease control in mogamulizumab-treated CTCL patients.

Adele de MassonDelphine DarbordGabor DobosMarie BoissonMarie RoelensCaroline Ram-WolffCharles CassiusHélène Le BuanecPierre de la GrangeFanélie JouenneBaptiste LouveauAurélie SadouxJean-David BouazizAnne Marie-CardineMartine BagotHélène Moins-TeisserencSamia MourahMaxime Battistella
Published in: Blood (2022)
Cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) are rare malignancies involving primarily the skin. Responses to treatment are usually short-lived in advanced CTCL. The determinants of long-term CTCL control are unclear. Mogamulizumab, an anti-human CCR4 antibody that acts by antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity against CCR4+ CTCL tumor cells and peripheral memory blood regulatory T cells, has been associated with long-lasting remissions and immune adverse events. Here, we reported skin rashes in 32% of 44 patients with CTCL treated with mogamulizumab, associated with significantly higher overall survival (hazard ratio, 0.16; 0.04-0.73; P = .01). Rash occurred in patients with Sézary syndrome and was associated with longer time to progression. These rashes were characterized by a CD163+ granulomatous and/or CD8+ lichenoid skin infiltrate. High-throughput sequencing analysis of T-cell receptor β genes in skin and blood flow cytometry confirmed the depletion of CTCL tumor cells, as well as the recruitment of new reactive T-cell clones in skin at the time of skin rash. CXCL9 and CXCL11, two macrophage-derived chemokines that recruit CXCR3+ T cells to skin, were overexpressed in skin rashes. A higher frequency of TIGIT+ and PD1+ exhausted reactive blood T cells was observed at baseline in patients with rash, and this frequency decreased with mogamulizumab treatment. These data are consistent with mogamulizumab-induced long-term immune CTCL control by activation of the macrophage and T-cell responses in patients with rash.
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