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1.
Clin Cancer Res ; 2024 Jul 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38980919

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Interleukin-2 and -12 cytokines have potent anti-cancer activity, but suffer a narrow therapeutic window due to off-tumor immune cell activation. Engineering cytokines with the ability to bind and associate with tumor collagen after intratumoral injection potentiated response without toxicity in mice, and was previously safe in pet dogs with sarcoma. Here we sought to test the efficacy of this approach with in dogs with advanced melanoma. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: This study examined fifteen client-owned dogs with histologically- or cytologically-confirmed malignant melanoma who received a single 9 Gray fraction of radiation therapy, followed by six cycles of combined collagen-anchored IL-2 and IL-12 therapy Q2W. Cytokine dosing followed a 3+3 dose escalation design, with the initial cytokine dose chosen from prior evaluation in canine sarcomas. No exclusion criteria for tumor stage or metastatic burden, age, weight, or neuter status were applied for this trial. RESULTS: Median survival regardless of tumor stage or dose level was 256 days and 10/13 (76.9%) dogs that completed treatment had CT-measured tumor regression at the treated lesion. In dogs with metastatic disease, 8/13 (61.5%) dogs had partial responses across their combined lesions, evidence of locoregional response. Profiling by Nanostring of treatment-resistant dogs revealed that B2m loss was predictive of poor response to this therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, these results confirm the ability of locally administered tumor-anchored cytokines to potentiate responses at regional disease sites when combined with radiation. This evidence supports the clinical translation of this approach and highlights the utility of comparative investigation in canine cancers.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405716

RESUMO

The clinical use of interleukin-2 and -12 cytokines against cancer is limited by their narrow therapeutic windows due to on-target, off-tumor activation of immune cells when delivered systemically. Engineering IL-2 and IL-12 to bind to extracellular matrix collagen allows these cytokines to be retained within tumors after intralesional injection, overcoming these clinical safety challenges. While this approach has potentiated responses in syngeneic mouse tumors without toxicity, the complex tumor-immune interactions in human cancers are difficult to recapitulate in mouse models of cancer. This has driven an increased role for comparative oncology clinical trials in companion (pet) dogs with spontaneous cancers that feature analogous tumor and immune biology to human cancers. Here, we report the results from a dose-escalation clinical trial of intratumoral collagen-binding IL-2 and IL-12 cytokines in pet dogs with malignant melanoma, observing encouraging local and regional responses to therapy that may suggest human clinical benefit with this approach.

3.
Clin Cancer Res ; 29(11): 2110-2122, 2023 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37014656

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Cytokine therapies such as IL2 and IL12 suffer from impractically small therapeutic windows driven by their on-target, off-tumor activity, limiting their clinical potential despite potent antitumor effects. We previously engineered cytokines that bind and anchor to tumor collagen following intratumoral injection, and sought to test their safety and biomarker activity in spontaneous canine soft-tissue sarcomas (STS). EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Collagen-binding cytokines were canine-ized to minimize immunogenicity and were used in a rapid dose-escalation study in healthy beagles to identify a maximum tolerated dose. Ten client-owned pet dogs with STS were then enrolled into trial, receiving cytokines at different intervals prior to surgical tumor excision. Tumor tissue was analyzed through IHC and NanoString RNA profiling for dynamic changes within treated tumors. Archived, untreated STS samples were analyzed in parallel as controls. RESULTS: Intratumorally administered collagen-binding IL2 and IL12 were well tolerated by STS-bearing dogs, with only Grade 1/2 adverse events observed (mild fever, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia). IHC revealed enhanced T-cell infiltrates, corroborated by an enhancement in gene expression associated with cytotoxic immune function. We found concordant increases in expression of counter-regulatory genes that we hypothesize would contribute to a transient antitumor effect, and confirmed in mouse models that combination therapy to inhibit this counter-regulation can improve responses to cytokine therapy. CONCLUSIONS: These results support the safety and activity of intratumorally delivered, collagen-anchoring cytokines for inflammatory polarization of the canine STS tumor microenvironment. We are further evaluating the efficacy of this approach in additional canine cancers, including oral malignant melanoma.


Assuntos
Melanoma , Sarcoma , Camundongos , Animais , Cães , Interleucina-12/genética , Interleucina-2 , Microambiente Tumoral , Citocinas , Sarcoma/tratamento farmacológico , Colágeno
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