Melanocyte destruction after antigen-specific immunotherapy of melanoma: direct evidence of T cell–mediated vitiligo

C Yee, JA Thompson, P Roche, DR Byrd… - The Journal of …, 2000 - rupress.org
C Yee, JA Thompson, P Roche, DR Byrd, PP Lee, M Piepkorn, K Kenyon, MM Davis
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2000rupress.org
Current strategies for the immunotherapy of melanoma include augmentation of the immune
response to tumor antigens represented by melanosomal proteins such as tyrosinase,
gp100, and MART-1. The possibility that intentional targeting of tumor antigens representing
normal proteins can result in autoimmune toxicity has been postulated but never
demonstrated previously in humans. In this study, we describe a patient with metastatic
melanoma who developed inflammatory lesions circumscribing pigmented areas of skin …
Current strategies for the immunotherapy of melanoma include augmentation of the immune response to tumor antigens represented by melanosomal proteins such as tyrosinase, gp100, and MART-1. The possibility that intentional targeting of tumor antigens representing normal proteins can result in autoimmune toxicity has been postulated but never demonstrated previously in humans. In this study, we describe a patient with metastatic melanoma who developed inflammatory lesions circumscribing pigmented areas of skin after an infusion of MART-1–specific CD8+ T cell clones. Analysis of the infiltrating lymphocytes in skin and tumor biopsies using T cell–specific peptide–major histocompatibility complex tetramers demonstrated a localized predominance of MART-1–specific CD8+ T cells (>28% of all CD8 T cells) that was identical to the infused clones (as confirmed by sequencing of the complementarity-determining region 3). In contrast to skin biopsies obtained from the patient before T cell infusion, postinfusion biopsies demonstrated loss of MART-1 expression, evidence of melanocyte damage, and the complete absence of melanocytes in affected regions of the skin. This study provides, for the first time, direct evidence in humans that antigen-specific immunotherapy can target not only antigen-positive tumor cells in vivo but also normal tissues expressing the shared tumor antigen.
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