Autologous Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocyte Mono-Therapy Can Rapidly Shrank Tumor in Asian Patient with Stage III/IV Cervical Cancer: Two Cases Report

IntroductionTumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) therapy is one of the most promising adoptive T cell therapies, which has shown great clinical efficacy against several solid malignancies. Nevertheless, clinical response to TILs mono-therapy in Asian patients with recurrent cervical cancer has not...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of women's health Vol. 16; pp. 31 - 39
Main Authors Li, Fenge, Wang, Yupeng, Yan, Jin, Wu, Huancheng, Du, Xueming, Feng, Weihong, Zhang, Xiaoqing, Xue, Yongming, Wang, Huaqing, Liu, Wenxin
Format Report
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2024
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Summary:IntroductionTumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) therapy is one of the most promising adoptive T cell therapies, which has shown great clinical efficacy against several solid malignancies. Nevertheless, clinical response to TILs mono-therapy in Asian patients with recurrent cervical cancer has not been well reported.Case PresentationHere, we report two patients who were diagnosed with metastatic cervical cancer and tumor progression following multiple conventional treatments. In particular, one of the patients has a history of severe myelosuppression after chemotherapy. The patients received lymphodepletion therapy, which consisted of cyclophosphamide (30mg/kg) for 2 days, followed by Fludarabine (25mg/m2) for 5 days, approximately 24 hr before receiving intravenous autologous TILs infusion. These two patients then received high doses of IL-2 for 10 days with the purpose of maintaining T cell survival and proliferation. Patient 1 experienced clinical partial response (PR) at 6 weeks post TILs infusion and a 33% tumor shrinkage at 12 weeks follow-up, and patient 2 was evaluated as stable disease (SD) at 6 weeks post treatment. Mild and manageable adverse events were observed and soon subsided after the TILs treatment. A time-course study examining the peripheral blood cell count and cytokine secretion demonstrated the persistence of infused TILs and long-term immune response.ConclusionThese results suggest that TILs mono-therapy can be a promising treatment strategy for Asian patients with late-stage metastatic cervical cancer even with severe myelosuppression. TILs infusion can induce persistence and a long-term systematic immune response that reversed peripheral CD4+T and CD8+T percentages implying that TILs infusion increased cytotic T cell responses, which is consistent with clinical responses in these patients. Trial registration number: NCT05366478.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Case Study-2
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SourceType-Reports-1
ObjectType-Report-1
ISSN:1179-1411
1179-1411
DOI:10.2147/IJWH.S446768