Department of Surgery, Emory University, Atlanta, GA
Michael C. Lowe , Brian Olson , Anthony Martinez , Jacklyn Hammons , Keith A. Delman , Melinda Lynne Yushak , Melanie Allor , Christine A. Reilly , Crystal L. Mallow , Elizabeth E. Evans , Terrence Lee Fisher , Gregory B. Lesinski , Ragini Reiney Kudchadkar
Background: SEMA4D has broad immunomodulatory effects in the tumor microenvironment (TME); blocking SEMA4D in combination with checkpoint inhibitors (CI) promotes immune infiltration, reduces recruitment of myeloid cells, enhances T cell activity, and promotes tumor regression. We hypothesized that adding pepinemab (VX15/2503), which targets SEMA4D, to CI would increase immunomodulatory effects and augment response in melanoma (NCT03769155). Methods: Patients with resectable stage IIIB/C/D melanoma were enrolled to control (no neoadjuvant therapy) or treatment cohorts (n = 8 in four cohorts of pepinemab plus nivolumab, ipilimumab, nivolumab/ipilimumab or alone). Here we report results from patients receiving two doses of nivolumab (360mg) and pepinemab (15mg/kg) every three weeks followed by surgery. Primary endpoint was T cell infiltration into the TME; secondary endpoints include pathologic response rates, peripheral immune profile, and safety. Results: Ten patients are reported: two were controls, eight received neoadjuvant therapy. Two patients had pathologic complete response, one had a near-complete pathologic response ( < 1% viable tumor), one had a partial response (41% viable tumor) and four had stable disease (73-90% viable tumor). All neoadjuvant patients underwent surgery without delay; one patient experienced grade 3 post-operative cellulitis. There were two treatment-related grade 3 adverse events (weakness and arthralgia). Pharmacodynamic studies confirmed saturation of PD-1 and SEMA4D in peripheral and tumor-infiltrating T cells. T/B cell (CD8+/CD20+) ratios, a surrogate for T cell infiltration, were higher in post-treatment tumors compared to pre-treatment and were higher in the tumor bed compared to normal adjacent tissue. Flow cytometric evaluation identified an increase in CD26hi CD4+ and CD8+ tumor-infiltrating effectors in treated patients compared to controls and an increase in peripheral frequencies of the PD-1-responsive effector HLA-DR+CD38+Ki67+ CD4+ and CD8+ T cells following treatment. Treatment increased infiltration of myeloid populations into the TME, increased expression of PD-L1 on TME myeloid populations, and increased expression of the SEMA4D receptor Plexin-B2 on the surface of TME CD45− and M2 macrophages and MDSC. Conclusions: Neoadjuvant nivolumab and pepinemab results in increased T cell infiltration with excellent major response rate (38%) and expected safety profile. We continue to enroll patients using other rational combinations of pepinemab and CI. Clinical trial information: NCT03769155
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Abstract Disclosures
2023 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Lisanne P. Zijlker
2019 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Michael C. Lowe
2022 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Irene L.M. Reijers
2024 ASCO Annual Meeting
First Author: Ines Esteves Domingues Pires Da Silva