In situ delivery of allogeneic natural killer cell (NK) combined with Cetuximab in liver metastases of gastrointestinal carcinoma: A phase I clinical trial.

Fiche publication


Date publication

janvier 2018

Journal

Oncoimmunology

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr ADOTEVI Olivier, Pr BORG Christophe, Dr FEIN Francine, Dr FERRAND Christophe, Dr GODET Yann, Pr PIVOT Xavier, Mme LAHEURTE Caroline, Dr KIM Stephano, Dr GALAINE Jeanne, Dr POUTHIER Fabienne, Dr LAKKIS Zaher, Dr LOYON Romain


Tous les auteurs :
Adotevi O, Godet Y, Galaine J, Lakkis Z, Idirene I, Certoux JM, Jary M, Loyon R, Laheurte C, Kim S, Dormoy A, Pouthier F, Barisien C, Fein F, Tiberghien P, Pivot X, Valmary-Degano S, Ferrand C, Morel P, Delabrousse E, Borg C

Résumé

Despite successful introduction of NK-based cellular therapy in the treatment of myeloid leukemia, the potential use of NK alloreactivity in solid malignancies is still elusive. We performed a phase I clinical trial to assess the safety and efficacy of delivery of allogeneic NK cells combined with cetuximab in liver metastasis of gastrointestinal origin. The conditioning chemotherapy was administrated before the allogeneic NK cells injection via hepatic artery. Three escalating doses were tested (3.10, 8.10 and 12.10 NK cells/kg) following by a high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2). Cetuximab was administered intravenously every week for 7 weeks. Nine patients with liver metastases of colorectal or pancreatic cancers were included, three per dose level. Hepatic artery injection was successfully performed in all patients with no report of dose-limiting toxicity. Two patients had febrile aplasia requiring a short-term antibiotherapy. Grade 3/4 anemia and thrombopenia were also observed related to the chemotherapy. Objective clinical responses were documented in 3 patients and among them 2 occurred in patients injected with cell products harboring two KIR ligand mismatches and one in a patient with one KIR ligand mismatch. Immune monitoring revealed that most patients presented an increase but transient of IL-15 and IL-7 cytokines levels one week after chemotherapy. Furthermore, a high expansion of FoxP3regulatory T cells and PD-1 T cells was observed in all patients, related to IL-2 administration. Our results demonstrated that combining allogeneic NK cells transfer via intra-hepatic artery, cetuximab and a high-dose IL-2 is feasible, well tolerated and may result in clinical responses.

Mots clés

NK cell, adoptive cell transfer, cetuximab, intrahepatic infusion

Référence

Oncoimmunology. 2018 ;7(5):e1424673