Immune recovery in patients with mantle cell lymphoma receiving long-term ibrutinib and venetoclax combination therapy
Details
Publication Year 2020-10-13,Volume 4,Issue #19,Page 4849-4859
Journal Title
Blood Adv
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Combination venetoclax plus ibrutinib for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) has demonstrated efficacy in the relapsed or refractory setting; however, the long-term impact on patient immunology is unknown. In this study, changes in immune subsets of MCL patients treated with combination venetoclax and ibrutinib were assessed over a 4-year period. Multiparameter flow cytometry of peripheral blood mononuclear cells showed that >/=12 months of treatment resulted in alterations in the proportions of multiple immune subsets, most notably CD4+ and CD8+ effector and central memory T cells and natural killer cells, and normalization of T-cell cytokine production in response to T-cell receptor stimulation. Gene expression analysis identified upregulation of multiple myeloid genes (including S100 and cathepsin family members) and inflammatory pathways over 12 months. Four patients with deep responses stopped study drugs, resulting in restoration of normal immune subsets for all study parameters except myeloid gene/pathway expression, suggesting long-term combination venetoclax and ibrutinib irreversibly affects this population. Our findings demonstrate that long-term combination therapy is associated with immune recovery in MCL, which may allow responses to subsequent immunotherapies and suggests that this targeted therapy results in beneficial impacts on immunological recovery. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02471391.
Publisher
ASH
Research Division(s)
Blood Cells And Blood Cancer
PubMed ID
33031542
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2020002810
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2020-11-02 04:55:15
Last Modified: 2020-11-02 04:57:04
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙