Brown RD, Spencer A, Joy Ho P, Kennedy N, Kabani K, Yang S, Sze DM, Aklilu E, Gibson J, Joshua DE Prognostically significant cytotoxic T cell clones are stimulated after thalidomide therapy in patients with multiple myeloma. [JOURNAL ARTICLE] Leuk Lymphoma 2009 Nov; 50(11):1860-1864.
The expanded T cell clones are associated with a prolonged survival in patients with multiple myeloma. We sought to confirm this prognostic significance in a multicenter patient cohort and investigate the effect of thalidomide on clones and T regulatory cells (T(regs)). Blood was collected from 120 patients enrolled in a Phase III trial of maintenance therapy +/- thalidomide after autologous stem cell transplantation. TCR Vbeta repertoire analysis identified T cell expansions in 48% of patients pre-transplant and 68% after 8-month maintenance. T cell expansions, previously shown to be clonal, were predominantly CD8 + (93%) and all 24 TCR Vbeta families tested were represented. Thalidomide therapy was associated with a significant increase in the incidence of patients with multiple expansions (49% vs. 23%; chi(2) = 6.8; p = 0.01). The presence of expansions regardless of therapy was associated with a significantly longer median progression free survival (PFS) (32.1 vs. 17.6 months; chi(2) = 5.6; p = 0.02) and overall survival (OS) (chi(2) = 3.9; p < 0.05). Median PFS in the thalidomide arm was 50.9 months for patients with expansions and 28.3 months for patients without expansions (chi(2) = 19.4; p = 0.0002). Thalidomide did not appear to modulate T(reg) numbers. Expanded T cell clones are prognostically significant and have an impact on progression after thalidomide therapy in a proportion of patients.
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