Analysis of off-tumour toxicities of T-cell-engaging bispecific antibodies via donor-matched intestinal organoids and tumouroids

Marius F. Harter(Roche (Switzerland)), Timothy Recaldin(Roche (Switzerland)), Régine Gérard(Roche (Switzerland)), Blandine Avignon(Roche (Switzerland)), Yannik Bollen(Roche (Switzerland)), Cinzia Esposito(University of Basel), Karolina Guja-Jarosz(University of Basel), Kristina Kromer(Roche (Switzerland)), Adrian Filip(Roche (Switzerland)), Julien Aubert(Roche (Switzerland)), Anneliese Schneider(Roche (Switzerland)), Marina Bacac(Roche (Switzerland)), Michael Bscheider(Roche (Switzerland)), Nadine Stokar‐Regenscheit(Roche (Switzerland)), Salvatore Piscuoglio(University of Basel), Joep Beumer(Roche (Switzerland)), Nikolche Gjorevski(Roche (Switzerland))
Nature Biomedical Engineering
December 19, 2023
Cited by 68Open Access
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Abstract

Predicting the toxicity of cancer immunotherapies preclinically is challenging because models of tumours and healthy organs do not typically fully recapitulate the expression of relevant human antigens. Here we show that patient-derived intestinal organoids and tumouroids supplemented with immune cells can be used to study the on-target off-tumour toxicities of T-cell-engaging bispecific antibodies (TCBs), and to capture clinical toxicities not predicted by conventional tissue-based models as well as inter-patient variabilities in TCB responses. We analysed the mechanisms of T-cell-mediated damage of neoplastic and donor-matched healthy epithelia at a single-cell resolution using multiplexed immunofluorescence. We found that TCBs that target the epithelial cell-adhesion molecule led to apoptosis in healthy organoids in accordance with clinical observations, and that apoptosis is associated with T-cell activation, cytokine release and intra-epithelial T-cell infiltration. Conversely, tumour organoids were more resistant to damage, probably owing to a reduced efficiency of T-cell infiltration within the epithelium. Patient-derived intestinal organoids can aid the study of immune-epithelial interactions as well as the preclinical and clinical development of cancer immunotherapies.


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