4.6 Article

Characterization of the immune response in patients with cancer of the oral cavity after neoadjuvant immunotherapy with the IRX-2 regimen

Journal

ORAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2021.105587

Keywords

Immunotherapy; Oral cavity carcinoma; Neoadjuvant; NanoString; Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes; Cytokine

Funding

  1. Brooklyn ImmunoTherapeutics, Inc., Brooklyn, New York
  2. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health [P30CA046592]
  3. Brooklyn ImmunoTherapeutics, Inc.
  4. Rogel Cancer Center at University of Michigan

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IRX-2 is a homologous cell-derived multi-cytokine biologic with immune modulatory effects in oral cavity carcinoma patients, inducing changes in immune gene expression and DNA methylation. Immune-related genes showed alterations after IRX-2 therapy, with DMBT1 identified as a potential tumor suppressor. Overall, the effects of IRX-2 seem to have a subtle, targeted, or patient-specific impact.
Objective: IRX-2 is a homologous cell-derived multi-cytokine biologic with multifaceted immune modulatory effects that has been shown to induce increased lymphocyte infiltration into primary tumors in oral cavity carcinoma. Our objective was to characterize tumor immune gene expression and epigenomic changes after neoadjuvant IRX-2 immunotherapy in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity. Methods: A randomized phase II trial was conducted of the IRX regimen 3 weeks prior to surgery for previously untreated patients with Stage II-IV oral cavity carcinoma. The treatment regimen consisted of low dose (300 mg/m(2)) cyclophosphamide (day 1) followed by 10 days of regional perilymphatic IRX-2 cytokine injections and daily oral indomethacin, zinc and omeprazole (Regimen 1) compared to the identical regimen without the IRX-2 cytokines (Regimen 2). The NanoString immune panel (730 genes) and Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip were performed to assess the gene expression and DNA methylation signatures, respectively, in pre- and post-immunotherapy tumor samples. Results: A total of 51 and 79 immune-related genes were found upregulated and downregulated, respectively, in the samples from Regimen 1 patients after treatment, while 51 and 56 were found upregulated and down regulated in the samples for Regimen 2. When comparing the changes between the two regimens, we identified 9 genes significantly different, including DMBT1, a potential tumor suppressor, functioning in tumor invasion of head and neck cancer. The exploration of DNA methylation showed slight overall hypermethylation after treatment in both regimens, especially for Regimen 1 immune responders, and methylation-based cell type deconvolution demonstrated high concordance with tumor infiltrating T lymphocyte cell counts. Conclusion: While a consistent patient response after treatment was observed, most changes were similar between regimens, indicating a subtle, targeted, or patient-specific effect of IRX-2 cytokines. Change in DMBT1 expression was a unique finding that will require further study to better understand its significance.

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