Investigator

Juan Francisco Grau Bejar

Medical Oncologist/Clinical Researcher · Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology, Gynecological Cancer Programme

About

JFGJuan Francisco Gr…
Papers(3)
Immune predictors of …Spatial Profiling of …Phase I Trial of Firs…
Collaborators(10)
Ana OakninKosei HasegawaLaure ChardinMarco de BruynMarta Gil-MartinMasashi SatoMichel FabbroNadine DohollouNathalie Bonichon-Lam…Patricia Pautier
Institutions(9)
Vall Dhebron Institut…Saitama Medical Unive…Universit Paris SaclayFaculteit Medische We…Institut Catal Doncol…Unknown InstitutionInstitut Regional Du …Polyclinique Bordeaux…Institut Gustave Rous…

Papers

Spatial Profiling of Ovarian Carcinoma and Tumor Microenvironment Evolution under Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy

Abstract Purpose: This study investigates changes in CD8+ cells, CD8+/Foxp3 ratio, HLA I expression, and immune coregulator density at diagnosis and upon neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), correlating changes with clinical outcomes. Experimental Design: Multiplexed immune profiling and cell clustering analysis were performed on paired matched ovarian cancer samples to characterize the immune tumor microenvironment (iTME) at diagnosis and under NACT in patients enrolled in the CHIVA trial (NCT01583322). Results: Several immune cell (IC) subsets and immune coregulators were quantified pre/post-NACT. At diagnosis, patients with higher CD8+ T cells and HLA I+-enriched tumors were associated with a better outcome. The CD8+/Foxp3+ ratio increased significantly post-NACT in favor of increased immune surveillance, and the influx of CD8+ T cells predicted better outcomes. Clustering analysis stratified pre-NACT tumors into four subsets: high Binf, enriched in B clusters; high Tinf and low Tinf, according to their CD8+ density; and desert clusters. At baseline, these clusters were not correlated with patient outcomes. Under NACT, tumors were segregated into three clusters: high BinfTinf, low Tinf, and desert. The high BinfTinf, more diverse in IC composition encompassing T, B, and NK cells, correlated with improved survival. PDL1 was rarely expressed, whereas TIM3, LAG3, and IDO1 were more prevalent. Conclusions: Several iTMEs exist during tumor evolution, and the NACT impact on iTME is heterogeneous. Clustering analysis of patients unravels several IC subsets within ovarian cancer and can guide future personalized approaches. Targeting different checkpoints such as TIM3, LAG3, and IDO1, more prevalent than PDL1, could more effectively harness antitumor immunity in this anti-PDL1–resistant malignancy.

Phase I Trial of First-line Bintrafusp Alfa in Patients with Locally Advanced or Persistent/Recurrent/Metastatic Cervical Cancer

Abstract Purpose: Bintrafusp alfa, a first-in-class bifunctional fusion protein composed of the extracellular domain of TGFβ receptor II (a TGFβ “trap”) fused to a human IgG1 mAb blocking programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), was evaluated as treatment in patients with locally advanced or persistent, recurrent, or metastatic (P/R/M) cervical cancer. Patients and Methods: In this multicenter, open-label, phase Ib trial (NCT04551950), patients with P/R/M cervical cancer received bintrafusp alfa 2,400 mg once every 3 weeks plus cisplatin or carboplatin plus paclitaxel with (Cohort 1A; n = 8) or without (Cohort 1B; n = 9) bevacizumab; patients with locally advanced cervical cancer received bintrafusp alfa 2,400 mg every 3 weeks plus cisplatin plus radiation, followed by bintrafusp alfa monotherapy maintenance (Cohort 2; n = 8). The primary endpoint was safety; secondary endpoints included efficacy (including objective response rate) and pharmacokinetics. Results: At the data cutoff of April 27, 2022, patients in Cohorts 1A, 1B, and 2 had received bintrafusp alfa for a median duration of 37.9, 31.1, and 16.7 weeks, respectively. Two dose-limiting toxicities (grade 4 amylase elevation and grade 3 menorrhagia) unrelated to bintrafusp alfa were observed in Cohort 1B and none in other cohorts. Most treatment-emergent adverse events of special interest were grades 1–2 in severity, most commonly anemia (62.5%–77.8%) and bleeding events (62.5%–77.8%). Objective response rate was 75.0% [95% confidence interval (CI), 34.9–96.8], 44.4% (95% CI, 13.7–78.8), and 62.5% (95% CI, 24.5–91.5) in Cohorts 1A, 1B, and 2, respectively. Conclusions: Bintrafusp alfa had manageable safety and demonstrated clinical activity, further supporting the investigation of TGFβ/PD-L1 inhibition in human papillomavirus–associated cancers, including cervical cancer.

23Works
3Papers
36Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Medical Oncologist/Clinical Researcher

Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology · Gynecological Cancer Programme

2022–

Translational Research Fellowship

Institut Gustave Roussy · Gynecological Cancer Translational Research Laboratory, INSERN Unit 981

2019–

Clinical Oncology Fellow

Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari · Gynaecologic Cancer Unit

Education

2019

Molecular Oncology Master's Degree

Universidad Rey Juan Carlos · Centro de Estudios Biosanitarios - URJC

2019

Medical Oncology Specialist

Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari · Medical Oncology Department

2014

Doctor of Medecine

Universidad de Sevilla · Facultad de Medicina

Country

ES

Keywords
Gynecological CancersClinical and Translational Research