An autologous culture model of nodal B-cell lymphoma identifies ex vivo determinants of response to bispecific antibodies

Author:

Roider Tobias12ORCID,Brinkmann Berit J.ORCID,Kim Vladislav2,Knoll Mareike1,Kolb Carolin1,Roessner Philipp M.3ORCID,Bordas Marie3,Dreger Peter1,Müller-Tidow Carsten1ORCID,Huber Wolfgang2ORCID,Seiffert Martina3,Dietrich SaschaORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine V, Hematology, Oncology and Rheumatology, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany;

2. European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Heidelberg, Germany;

3. Division of Molecular Genetics, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) can induce long-term responses in patients with refractory and relapsed B-cell lymphoma. Nevertheless, response rates across patients are heterogeneous, and the factors determining quality and duration of responses are poorly understood. To identify key determinants of response to BsAbs, we established a primary, autologous culture model allowing us to mimic treatment with CD3xCD19 and CD3xCD20 BsAbs within the lymph node microenvironment ex vivo. T cell–mediated killing of lymphoma cells and proliferation of T cells varied significantly among patients but highly correlated between BsAbs targeting CD20 or CD19. Ex vivo response to BsAbs was significantly associated with expansion of T cells and secretion of effector molecules (eg, granzyme B, perforin) but not with expression of T-cell exhaustion (eg, PD1, TIM3) or activation markers (eg, CD25, CD69) or formation of intercellular contacts. In addition, we identified a distinct phenotype of regulatory T cells that was linked to ex vivo response independently from T-cell frequency at baseline. High expression levels of Aiolos (IKZF1), ICOS, and CXCR5 were positively associated with ex vivo response, whereas strong expression of Helios (IKZF2) had an unfavorable impact on ex vivo response to BsAbs. We further showed that lenalidomide, nivolumab, and atezolizumab improved ex vivo response to BsAbs by potentiating T-cell effector functions. In summary, our ex vivo study identified a distinct regulatory T-cell phenotype as a potential contributor to treatment failure of BsAbs and suggests drug combinations of high clinical relevance that could improve the efficacy of BsAbs.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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