Cancer Immunotherapy Based on Mutation-Specific CD4+ T Cells in a Patient with Epithelial Cancer

Eric Tran(National Institutes of Health), Simon Turcotte(National Institutes of Health), Alena Gros(National Institutes of Health), Paul F. Robbins(National Institutes of Health), Yong‐Chen Lu(National Institutes of Health), Mark E. Dudley(National Institutes of Health), John R. Wunderlich(National Institutes of Health), Robert Somerville(National Institutes of Health), Katherine Hogan(National Institutes of Health), Christian S. Hinrichs(National Institutes of Health), Maria R. Parkhurst(National Institutes of Health), James C. Yang(National Institutes of Health), Steven A. Rosenberg(National Institutes of Health)
Science
May 8, 2014
Cited by 1,711Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Limited evidence exists that humans mount a mutation-specific T cell response to epithelial cancers. We used a whole-exomic-sequencing-based approach to demonstrate that tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) from a patient with metastatic cholangiocarcinoma contained CD4+ T helper 1 (T(H)1) cells recognizing a mutation in erbb2 interacting protein (ERBB2IP) expressed by the cancer. After adoptive transfer of TIL containing about 25% mutation-specific polyfunctional T(H)1 cells, the patient achieved a decrease in target lesions with prolonged stabilization of disease. Upon disease progression, the patient was retreated with a >95% pure population of mutation-reactive T(H)1 cells and again experienced tumor regression. These results provide evidence that a CD4+ T cell response against a mutated antigen can be harnessed to mediate regression of a metastatic epithelial cancer.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis