Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies used to treat cancer come with the risk of adverse autoimmune responses, including arthritis that can persist for years and require joint replacement surgery.
Little is known about the specific cells responsible for these events.
Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, and collaborators led a study to investigate these immune adverse events and identified a specific type of CD8 T cell that characterises inflammatory arthritis induced by ICI therapies.
Researchers studied T cells from a patient with severe ICI-arthritis who required bilateral knee replacements.
In addition to these two joint tissue samples, they studied the fluid that accumulates within joints from an additional 23 patients with this condition and compared these samples to samples from patients with two common autoimmune conditions, rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis.
By comparing protein and gene expression levels across diseases, they were able to characterise unique immunological features of the CD8 T cells in ICI-arthritis.
They further identified that a specific set of cytokines, type I interferons, can promote the CD8 T cell activation seen in ICI-arthritis.
Patients whose cancer was treated with ICI had high levels of this CD8 T cell type, and additional analysis revealed that the cells travelled between the joints and blood.
Further, the T cells persisted in the bloodstream, providing one explanation for why ICI-arthritis continues even after ICI therapy is discontinued.
Limitations include a small cohort of patients who are taking various treatments.
Further research is needed to characterise how the CD8 T cells contribute to joint inflammation.
“Our results suggest that ICI therapy gives rise to a unique population of CD8 T cells in patients who develop ICI-arthritis,” said co-corresponding author Deepak A Rao, MD, PhD, of the Brigham’s Division of Rheumatology, Inflammation, Immunity.
“The immune events we characterised differ dramatically from the typical responses we have seen in autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis.”
Source: Brigham and Women's Hospital
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