Anti-CD20 therapy corrects a CD8 regulatory T cell deficit in multiple sclerosis

Author:

Howlett-Prieto Quentin1,Feng Xuan1,Kramer John F2,Kramer Kevin J3,Houston Timothy W1,Reder Anthony T1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA

2. St Thomas Medical Partners, Neurology, Nashville, TN, USA

3. Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effect of long-term anti-CD20 B-cell-depleting treatment on regulatory T cell immune subsets that are subnormal in untreated MS patients. Methods: 30 clinically stable MS patients, before and over 38 months of ocrelizumab treatment, were compared to 13 healthy controls, 29 therapy-naïve MS, 9 interferon-β-treated MS, 3 rituximab-treated MS, and 3 rituximab-treated patients with other autoimmune inflammatory diseases. CD8, CD28, CD4, and FOXP3 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells was quantitated with flow cytometry. Results: CD8+ CD28 regulatory cells rose from one-third of healthy control levels before ocrelizumab treatment (2.68% vs 7.98%), normalized by 12 months (13.5%), and rose to 2.4-fold above healthy controls after 18 months of ocrelizumab therapy (19.0%). CD4+ FOXP3+ regulatory cells were lower in MS than in healthy controls (7.98%) and showed slight long-term decreases with ocrelizumab. CD8+ CD28 and CD4+ FOXP3+ regulatory T cell percentages in IFN-β-treated MS patients were between those of untreated MS and healthy controls. Interpretation: Long-term treatment with ocrelizumab markedly enriches CD8+ CD28 regulatory T cells and corrects the low levels seen in MS before treatment, while slightly decreasing CD4+ FOXP3+ regulatory T cells. Homeostatic enrichment of regulatory CD8 T cells provides a mechanism, in addition to B cell depletion, for the benefits of anti-CD20 treatment in MS.

Funder

Genentech

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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