KBKoen Brummel
Papers(3)
Spatiotemporal Immune…Vvax001, a Therapeuti…Neoadjuvant immune ch…
Institutions(1)
University Medical Ce…

Papers

Spatiotemporal Immune Landscape and Long-term Immune Memory in POLE-Mutant Endometrial Cancer at the Single-Cell Level

Abstract Polymerase epsilon–mutant (POLE-mut) endometrial cancers are characterized by a near 100% disease-specific survival rate, even when treated with surgery alone. This survival, combined with the ultramutated genome and high level of neoantigens in these tumors, indicates a substantial degree of immune control in preventing disease spread and recurrence. Although these features are intriguing, the analysis of immune infiltration in POLE-mut endometrial cancers has predominantly been confined to IHC studies. In this study, we used single-cell RNA and T-cell receptor sequencing to characterize the immune landscape of POLE-mut endometrial cancers. Moreover, we analyzed patient blood samples taken 2 to 8 years after curative treatment to assess the formation of long-term immune memory in circulation. We identified specialized tumor-infiltrating myeloid subsets at different stages of maturation, an array of lymphocytes ranging from immature to cytotoxic, and adaptive NK cells, as well as tumor-reactive exhausted and effector T cells, all contributing to a highly inflammatory antitumor response. Our analysis of blood samples taken years after curative treatment uncovered the presence of tumor-reactive T-cell clones that matched the primary tumor. This indicates the formation of systemic long-term memory immune responses in POLE-mut endometrial cancer survivors. Our study highlights the distinctive immunogenicity of POLE-mut endometrial cancer and identifies key features associated with persistent antitumor immunity that may contribute to prolonged, relapse-free survival.

Vvax001, a Therapeutic Vaccine, for Patients with HPV16-Positive High-grade Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia: A Phase II Trial

Abstract Purpose: Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is the major cause of (pre)malignant cervical lesions. We previously demonstrated that Vvax001, a replication-incompetent Semliki Forest virus vaccine encoding HPV type 16 (HPV16) E6 and E7, induced potent anti-E6 and -E7 cytotoxic T-cell responses. In this study, we investigated the clinical efficacy of Vvax001 in patients with HPV16-positive cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) grade 3 (CIN3). Patients and Methods: Patients with newly diagnosed HPV16-positive CIN3 were eligible for participation. Patients received three immunizations of Vvax001 (5 × 107 infectious particles) at a 3-week interval. Up to 19 weeks after the last immunization, patients were monitored for regression of CIN3 by colposcopy. A colposcopy-guided biopsy was taken at the last visit, and a standard-of-care loop excision was performed only in case of remaining CIN grade 2/CIN3. Histopathologic response rates, HPV16 clearance, treatment-related adverse events, and vaccine-induced immune responses were assessed. Results: A total of 18 patients were enrolled and fully immunized. Colposcopic examination revealed a reduction in CIN3 lesion sizes in 17/18 (94%) patients already evident from 3 weeks onward after the last immunization. A histopathologic complete response (regression to CIN grade 1 or no dysplasia) was observed in 9/18 patients (50%) and HPV16 clearance in 10/16 patients (63%). Vvax001 did not induce clearance of other HPV types. To date, no recurrences have been observed, with a median and longest disease-free survival of 20 and 30 months, respectively. No serious adverse events were observed. Conclusions: Treatment with Vvax001 is safe and feasible and shows preliminary clinical effectiveness in patients with HPV16-associated CIN3 lesions.

Neoadjuvant immune checkpoint blockade in women with mismatch repair deficient endometrial cancer: a phase I study

Neoadjuvant immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has shown unprecedented activity in mismatch repair deficient (MMRd) colorectal cancers, but its effectiveness in MMRd endometrial cancer (EC) remains unknown. In this investigator-driven, phase I, feasibility study (NCT04262089), 10 women with MMRd EC of any grade, planned for primary surgery, received two cycles of neoadjuvant pembrolizumab (200 mg IV) every three weeks. A pathologic response (primary objective) was observed in 5/10 patients, with 2 patients showing a major pathologic response. No patient achieved a complete pathologic response. A partial radiologic response (secondary objective) was observed in 3/10 patients, 5/10 patients had stable disease and 2/10 patients were non-evaluable on magnetic resonance imaging. All patients completed treatment without severe toxicity (exploratory objective). At median duration of follow-up of 22.5 months, two non-responders experienced disease recurrence. In-depth analysis of the loco-regional and systemic immune response (predefined exploratory objective) showed that monoclonal T cell expansion significantly correlated with treatment response. Tumour-draining lymph nodes displayed clonal overlap with intra-tumoural T cell expansion. All pre-specified endpoints, efficacy in terms of pathologic response as primary endpoint, radiologic response as secondary outcome and safety and tolerability as exploratory endpoint, were reached. Neoadjuvant ICB with pembrolizumab proved safe and induced pathologic, radiologic, and immunologic responses in MMRd EC, warranting further exploration of extended neoadjuvant treatment.

26Works
3Papers

Positions

Researcher

Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG

2021–

PhD-candidate / Research Physician

University Medical Center Groningen · Obstetrics and Gynecology

2021–

Junior Doctor

Medisch Centrum Leeuwarden · Obstetrics and Gynecology

Education

2021

MSc / MD

University of Groningen · Faculty of Medical Sciences

2017

BSc

University of Groningen · Faculty of Medical Sciences - Medicine

Country

NL

Keywords
Gynecologic oncologyImmunologyImmune therapy