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Keratinocyte growth factor impairs human thymic recovery from lymphopenia

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Azzopardi, Laura 
Kousin-Ezewu, Onajite 
Mullay, Harpreet 
Thompson, Sara 

Abstract

Background: The lymphocyte-depleting antibody alemtuzumab is a highly effective treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS); however 50% of patients develop novel autoimmunity post-treatment. Most at risk are individuals who reconstitute their T-cell pool by proliferating residual cells, rather than producing new T-cells in the thymus; raising the possibility that autoimmunity might be prevented by increasing thymopoiesis. Keratinocyte growth factor (palifermin) promotes thymopoiesis in non-human primates.

Methods: Following a dose-tolerability sub-study, individuals with RRMS (duration ≤10 years; expanded disability status scale ≤5·0; with ≥2 relapses in the previous 2 years) were randomised to placebo or 180mcg/kg/day palifermin, given for 3 days immediately prior to and after each cycle of alemtuzumab, with repeat doses at M1 and M3. The interim primary endpoint was naïve CD4+ T-cell count at M6. Exploratory endpoints included: number of recent thymic-emigrants (RTEs) and signaljoint T-cell receptor excision circles (sjTRECs)/mL of blood. The trial primary endpoint was incidence of autoimmunity at M30.

Findings: At M6, individuals receiving palifermin had fewer naïve CD4+T-cells (2.229x107 /L vs. 7.733x107 /L; p=0.007), RTEs (16% vs. 34%) and sjTRECs/mL (1100 vs. 3396), leading to protocoldefined termination of recruitment. No difference was observed in the rate of autoimmunity between the two groups

Conclusion: In contrast to animal studies, palifermin reduced thymopoiesis in our patients. These results offer a note of caution to those using palifermin to promote thymopoiesis in other settings, particularly in the oncology/haematology setting where alemtuzumab is often used as part of the conditioning regime.

Description

Keywords

Autoimmune diseases, Immunology, T cell development, T cells, Therapeutics, Adolescent, Adult, Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, CD52 Antigen, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Fibroblast Growth Factor 7, Humans, Lymphopenia, Male, Mice, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting, Young Adult

Journal Title

JCI Insight

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2379-3708
2379-3708

Volume Title

4

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Investigation
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (G1100114)
Wellcome Trust (105924/Z/14/Z)
Wellcome Trust (105924/Z/14/A)
Wellcome Trust (105924/Z/14/Z)
Wellcome Trust (105924/Z/14/A)
J P Moulton Charitable Foundation (unknown)
J P Moulton Charitable Foundation (unknown)
Trial - MRC and Moulton Trust Funding Me (senior Author) - Wellcome Trust Funding.