- Saijo, Atsuro;
- Ogino, Hirokazu;
- Butowski, Nicholas A;
- Tedesco, Meghan R;
- Gibson, David;
- Watchmaker, Payal B;
- Okada, Kaori;
- Wang, Albert S;
- Shai, Anny;
- Salazar, Andres M;
- Molinaro, Annette M;
- Rabbitt, Jane E;
- Shahin, Maryam;
- Perry, Arie;
- Clarke, Jennifer L;
- Taylor, Jennie W;
- Daras, Mariza;
- Bush, Nancy Ann Oberheim;
- Hervey-Jumper, Shawn L;
- Phillips, Joanna J;
- Chang, Susan M;
- Hilf, Norbert;
- Mayer-Mokler, Andrea;
- Keler, Tibor;
- Berger, Mitchel S;
- Okada, Hideho
Background
Central nervous system (CNS) WHO grade 2 low-grade glioma (LGG) patients are at high risk for recurrence and with unfavorable long-term prognosis due to the treatment resistance and malignant transformation to high-grade glioma. Considering the relatively intact systemic immunity and slow-growing nature, immunotherapy may offer an effective treatment option for LGG patients.Methods
We conducted a prospective, randomized pilot study to evaluate the safety and immunological response of the multipeptide IMA950 vaccine with agonistic anti-CD27 antibody, varlilumab, in CNS WHO grade 2 LGG patients. Patients were randomized to receive combination therapy with IMA950 + poly-ICLC and varlilumab (Arm 1) or IMA950 + poly-ICLC (Arm 2) before surgery, followed by adjuvant vaccines.Results
A total of 14 eligible patients were enrolled in the study. Four patients received pre-surgery vaccines but were excluded from postsurgery vaccines due to the high-grade diagnosis of the resected tumor. No regimen-limiting toxicity was observed. All patients demonstrated a significant increase of anti-IMA950 CD8+ T-cell response postvaccine in the peripheral blood, but no IMA950-reactive CD8+ T cells were detected in the resected tumor. Mass cytometry analyses revealed that adding varlilumab promoted T helper type 1 effector memory CD4+ and effector memory CD8+ T-cell differentiation in the PBMC but not in the tumor microenvironment.Conclusion
The combinational immunotherapy, including varlilumab, was well-tolerated and induced vaccine-reactive T-cell expansion in the peripheral blood but without a detectable response in the tumor. Further developments of strategies to overcome the blood-tumor barrier are warranted to improve the efficacy of immunotherapy for LGG patients.