Human Cytokine-Induced Memory-like NK Cells Exhibit in Vivo Anti-Leukemia Activity in Xenografted NSG Mice and in Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

2015 
Natural killer (NK) cells mediate anti-AML responses and previously published clinical trials of adoptive allogeneic NK cell therapy provide proof-of-principle that NK cells may eliminate leukemia cells in patients. However, complete remissions occur in 30-50% of patients with active AML and are typically of limited duration. Thus, improvements are needed for this promising cellular immunotherapy strategy. Following paradigm-shifting studies in mice, it was established that human NK cells exhibit an innate 9memory-like9 responses following a brief, combined pre-activation with IL-12, -15, and -18 (Romee R et. al., Blood, 2012). These long-lived memory-like NK cells have an enhanced ability to produce IFN-g in response to restimulation with cytokines or activating receptor ligation, even following extensive proliferation. We hypothesized that memory-like NK cells exhibit enhanced responses to myeloid leukemia. Compared to control NK cells from the same donor, IL-12/15/18-induced memory-like NK cells produced significantly increased IFN-g upon co-culture with primary AML blasts in vitro (P . Utilizing an in vivo xenograft model of human NK cells in NSG mice (Leong J et. al., BBMT, 2014), IL-12/15/18-induced memory-like NK cells that differentiated in NSG mice for 7 days exhibited increased IFN-g responses after ex vivo re-stimulation with K562 leukemia, confirming their memory-like functionality (P 6 /mouse, IV), and on day 3, groups of mice were injected with IL-12/15/18-pre-activated or control NK cells from the same donor (4x10 6 /mouse). Mice treated with a single dose of memory-like NK cells exhibited significantly improved in vivo leukemia control measured by whole mouse bioluminescent imaging (P=0.03), as well as overall survival (P Based on these pre-clinical findings, we initiated a first-in-human clinical trial of HLA-haploidentical IL-12/15/18-induced memory-like NK cells in patients with AML ( NCT01898793 ). Relapsed/refractory (rel/ref) AML patients receive lymphodepleting non-myeloablative flu/cy conditioning, infusion of a single dose of CD56 + CD3 - memory-like donor NK cells, followed by two weeks of low dose rhIL-2. Three patients were treated at dose level 1 (0.5x10 6 cells/kg) and two patients treated at dose level 2 (1.0x10 6 /kg) with no DLTs observed, and accrual continues. Correlative analyses utilizing donor-specific HLA mAbs allow tracking of donor memory-like NK cell frequency and function following adoptive transfer. Donor memory-like NK cells were detectable in the PB and BM of all tested patients with informative HLA (4/5), peak in frequency at 7-8 days post-infusion, and contract after 14-21 days as expected following recipient T cell recovery (Figure). Memory-like NK cells exhibit significantly increased Ki67% + as a marker of proliferation at day 7 [97.8+1.0% (donor) vs. 21.6+5.5% (recipient), mean+SEM, P + NK cells following restimulation with K562 leukemia cells in the same blood [1009+590 (donor) vs. 8+3 (recipient) IFN-g+ NK cells] or BM [686+423 (donor) vs. 4+2 (recipient) IFN-g+ NK cells] samples. Two of four evaluable patients treated with memory-like NK cells had leukemia free BM and PB at days 14 post-therapy, which correlated with BM NK cell frequency and IFN-g production (Figure). CIML007 had rel/ref AML with 48% BM blasts pre-therapy, and had no evidence of leukemia on day 14, 28, and 100 BM biopsies, and has an ongoing complete remission more than 100 days after this therapy. CIML009 had 80% BM blasts pre-therapy, and had no evidence of leukemia on day 14 BM biopsy post-infusion. Thus, human IL-12/15/18-induced memory-like NK cells expand and have enhanced anti-AML function following adoptive transfer in patients, thereby constituting a promising translational innovation for immunotherapy of AML. Disclosures Fehniger: Celgene: Research Funding.
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