Phase i study of NT-I7, a long-acting interleukin-7, in severe treatment-related lymphopenia following standard radiation and temozolomide for high-grade glioma

  • Jian Campian
  • , Stuart A. Grossman
  • , Angela Shaulov Kask
  • , Samuel Kosydar
  • , Roy Strowd
  • , Anna Piotrowski
  • , Justin Tang
  • , Milan G. Chheda
  • , John F. Dipersio
  • , Dan Schullery
  • , Leonard D'Amico
  • , Serena Desideri
  • , Neeraja Danda
  • , Sara Ferrando-Martinez
  • , Byung Ha Lee
  • , Steven P. Fling
  • , Xiaobu Ye

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background High-grade gliomas (HGG) have a poor prognosis despite aggressive treatment. Severe, persistent lymphopenia occurring in HGG patients after concurrent chemoradiation is associated with worse survival. NT-I7, a long-acting interleukin-7 analog, has been shown to increase CD4 and CD8 counts in healthy, septic, and HIV-positive adults. This multi-institutional, NCI-funded dose-escalation trial is the first to evaluate NT-I7 safety and activity in HGG patients with severe treatment-related lymphopenia (TRL) and the effect of co-administered glucocorticoids. Methods Eligible HGG patients had CD4 counts <300 cells/mm3 after 5 weeks of standard chemoradiation and were receiving either ≤0.75 or ≥4 mg/day of dexamethasone. Patients received a single intramuscular dose of NT-I7 (60 or 360 µg/kg) post-chemoradiation, followed by safety evaluation and multi-parameter, longitudinal monitoring of lymphocyte populations and immunologic function. Results NT-I7 was well tolerated in all 12 patients (median age 64; median CD4 count 161 cells/mm³) before the study closed prematurely. Absolute lymphocyte counts doubled in 83% (10/12; 95% CI: 51.6%-97.9%) of patients, and CD4 counts doubled in 42% (5/12; 95% CI: 15.2%-72.3%) of patients. Glucocorticoid use did not significantly affect CD4 or lymphocyte increases. Correlative immune profiling revealed increased Ki67 expression in CD4 (P < .005) and CD8 (P < .05) after one week, along with the expansion of CD4 and CD8 T-cell subsets and CD56 + natural killer cells. Conclusions NT-I7 is well tolerated and effectively increases lymphocyte and CD4 counts in severe TRL patients, regardless of glucocorticoid use, suggesting its potential to mitigate TRL and improve outcomes in HGG.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbervdaf117
JournalNeuro-Oncology Advances
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2025

Keywords

  • NT-I7
  • high grade glioma
  • treatment related lymphopenia

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