• Traitements

  • Traitements systémiques : découverte et développement

  • Mélanome

BRAF(V600) Inhibitor GSK2118436 Targeted Inhibition of Mutant BRAF in Cancer Patients Does Not Impair Overall Immune Competency

Menée sur 13 patients atteints d'un mélanome présentant la mutation BRAF(V600E), cette étude évalue les effets d'un composé appelé GSK2118436 ou dabrafenib, un inhibiteur spécifique de BRAF(V600E), sur le système immunitaire

PURPOSE: An intact immune system likely contributes to the outcome of treatment, and may be important for clearance of drug-resistant tumor cells and for prevention of recurrence. While pharmacologic inhibition of BRAF(V600E) in melanoma patients, which is linked to immune suppression, results in an initial response rate, these responses are typically of limited duration. Combining immunotherapeutic drugs with kinase-targeted agents is an attractive strategy to increase clinical efficacy. Evidence suggesting that MAPK pathway activation in tumor cells contributes to immune suppression, suggests that the two approaches may be synergistic, provided that BRAF(V600E) inhibitors are nontoxic to immune cells. METHODS: To assess effects of mutant BRAF inhibition on systemic immunity, we studied 13 patients with tumors carrying a BRAF mutation who underwent treatment with GSK2118436, a V600 mutant BRAF-specific inhibitor. We performed peripheral blood immunomonitoring prior to and following one or two 28-day cycles of treatment. RESULTS: GSK2118436 treatment had no detectable impact on most immune parameters tested, including serum cytokine levels, peripheral blood cell counts, leukocyte subset frequencies, and memory CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell recall responses. A slight increase in serum TNF-alpha over the course of treatment was observed. In addition, three of the four HLA-A2-positive patients experienced a modest increase in circulating tumor antigen-specific CD8+ T cells following BRAF(V600) inhibitor therapy. CONCLUSIONS: GSK2118436 treatment results in no detectable negative impact on existing systemic immunity or the de novo generation of tumor-specific T-cells. These findings suggest that future trials combining specific BRAF(V600E) inhibition with immunotherapy should not impair immune response.

Clinical Cancer Research 2012

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