A phase I/II clinical trial of E6 T-cell receptor gene therapy for human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated epithelial cancers.

Authors

null

Christian S. Hinrichs

National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD

Christian S. Hinrichs , Stacey L. Doran , Sanja Stevanovic , Sabina Adhikary , Michelle Mojadidi , Mei Li Kwong , William C Faquin , Steven Feldman , Robert Somerville , Richard Mark Sherry , James C. Yang , Steven A. Rosenberg

Organizations

National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, Kite Pharma, Inc., Santa Monica, CA, National Cancer Institute Surgery Branch, Bethesda, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MA, Surgery Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD

Research Funding

NIH

Background: Engineered T-cell therapy has shown promise in B-cell malignancies and melanoma, but clinical investigation in epithelial cancers has been limited. Methods: We conducted a phase I/II clinical trial of T cells genetically engineered to express a T-cell receptor that targets an HLA-A*02:01-restricted epitope of E6 (E6 TCR T Cells) for patients with metastatic HPV-16+ carcinoma. The cell dose was escalated in cohorts of single patients (1 x 109, 1 x 1010, and 1-2 x 1011cells). Patients received a nonmyeloablative conditioning regimen of cyclophosphamide and fludarabine, a single infusion of E6 TCR T Cells, and systemic high-dose aldesleukin. Results: Twelve patients were treated, 9 at the highest cell dose, plus one retreatment. The cancer types were 6 cervical, 4 anal, 1 oropharyngeal, and 1 vaginal. No dose-limiting toxicity, autoimmune adverse events, or cytokine storm were observed. Two patients with anal cancer treated at the highest cell dose experienced partial tumor responses lasting 6 and 3 months after treatment. The patient with a 6-month response had complete regression of one tumor and partial regression of two tumors that were resected upon progression; she has no evidence of disease 22 months after treatment. T-cell receptor gene transfer efficiency was 45 and 51% in the responding patients, and 47-76% (median 61%) in the non-responding patients. Responding patients showed robust levels of E6 TCR T cell memory (30 and 46% of circulating T cells 1-month after treatment). Non-responding patients showed wide-ranging levels of E6 TCR T cell memory (range 4-53%, median 29%). Expression of programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) by circulating E6 TCR T Cells 1-month after treatment was low in all patients ( < 5%). The patient with a 6-month response had 7% E6 TCR T Cells in a resected tumor 10 months after treatment, 25% of which expressed PD-1. A patient with no response had no detectable E6 TCR T Cells in a resected tumor 3 months after treatment. Conclusions: E6 TCR T-cell therapy was safe at doses up to 2 x 1011 cells. Regression of metastatic HPV+ carcinoma occurred in two patients following treatment, suggesting that TCR T-cell therapy can mediate epithelial cancer regression. Clinical trial information: NCT02280811

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2017 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Poster Discussion Session

Session Title

Developmental Therapeutics—Immunotherapy

Track

Developmental Therapeutics and Translational Research,Immunotherapy

Sub Track

Cellular Immunotherapy

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT02280811

Citation

J Clin Oncol 35, 2017 (suppl; abstr 3009)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2017.35.15_suppl.3009

Abstract #

3009

Poster Bd #

104

Abstract Disclosures