Adoptive cell therapy targeting common p53 neoantigens in human solid cancers

crossref(2021)

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摘要
Abstract Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) targeting neoantigens can achieve durable clinical responses in patients with cancer. Most neoantigens arise from rare mutations, requiring highly individualized treatments. To broaden the applicability of ACT targeting neoantigens, we focused on TP53 mutations commonly shared across different cancer types. Here, we describe a library of T cell receptors (TCRs) that can target TP53 mutations shared among 7.3% of patients with solid cancers. These TCRs recognized tumor cells in a TP53 mutation- and human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-specific manner both in vitro and in vivo. Patients with chemorefractory epithelial cancers treated with ex vivo-expanded autologous tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) naturally reactive with mutant p53 experienced limited clinical responses (2 PRs/12 patients), and we detected low frequencies, exhausted phenotypes, and poor persistence of the infused mutant p53-reactive TILs. Alternatively, we treated one patient with a chemorefractory breast cancer with ACT by transducing autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes with an HLA-A*02-restricted anti-p53R175H TCR. The infused cells exhibited an improved immunophenotype and prolonged persistence compared to the TIL ACT and the patient experienced an objective tumor regression (-55%) that lasted 6 months. Collectively, these data demonstrate the feasibility of off-the-shelf TCR-engineered cell therapies targeting shared p53 neoantigens to treat human cancers.
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