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Immunotoxin-αCD40 therapy activates innate and adaptive immunity and generates a durable antitumor response in glioblastoma models.

Scott ParkerCharlotte McDowallLuis Sanchez-PerezCristina OsorioPatrick C DunckerAaron BrileyAdam M SwartzJames E HerndonYen-Rei A YuRoger E McLendonThomas F TedderAnnick DesjardinsDavid M AshleyMichael Dee GunnDavid S EnterlineDavid A KnorrIra H PastanSmita K NairDarell D BignerVidyalakshmi Chandramohan
Published in: Science translational medicine (2023)
D2C7-immunotoxin (IT), a dual-specific IT targeting wild-type epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and mutant EGFR variant III (EGFRvIII) proteins, demonstrates encouraging survival outcomes in a subset of patients with glioblastoma. We hypothesized that immunosuppression in glioblastoma limits D2C7-IT efficacy. To improve the response rate and reverse immunosuppression, we combined D2C7-IT tumor cell killing with αCD40 costimulation of antigen-presenting cells. In murine glioma models, a single intratumoral injection of D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment activated a proinflammatory phenotype in microglia and macrophages, promoted long-term tumor-specific CD8 + T cell immunity, and generated cures. D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment increased intratumoral Slamf6 + CD8 + T cells with a progenitor phenotype and decreased terminally exhausted CD8 + T cells. D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment stimulated intratumoral CD8 + T cell proliferation and generated cures in glioma-bearing mice despite FTY720-induced peripheral T cell sequestration. Tumor transcriptome profiling established CD40 up-regulation, pattern recognition receptor, cell senescence, and immune response pathway activation as the drivers of D2C7-IT+αCD40 antitumor responses. To determine potential translation, immunohistochemistry staining confirmed CD40 expression in human GBM tissue sections. These promising preclinical data allowed us to initiate a phase 1 study with D2C7-IT+αhCD40 in patients with malignant glioma (NCT04547777) to further evaluate this treatment in humans.
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