封锁
破骨细胞
骨髓
免疫系统
免疫检查点
骨重建
医学
免疫学
癌症研究
内分泌学
内科学
肿瘤科
受体
作者
Gwenyth J. Joseph,Lawrence A. Vecchi,Sasidhar Uppuganti,Jeremy F. Kane,Margaret Durdan,Prudence A. Hill,Ashtyn McAdoo,Hidenori Tanaka,Douglas B. Kell,Madeline B. Searcy,Wei Chen,Eben L. Rosenthal,David G. Harrison,Jeffry S. Nyman,Megan Weivoda,Rachelle W. Johnson
摘要
Abstract Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) block immunoregulatory receptor-ligand interactions and robustly increase survival of cancer patients but frequently result in immune-related adverse events (irAEs). While rheumatologic toxicities are commonly reported as irAEs, the effect of immune checkpoint blockade on the underlying mechanisms of ICI-induced fractures and bone loss is controversial, with reports of both positive and negative effects on bone mass in preclinical models. However, no previous reports have investigated the impact of ICIs on females or aged mice, or on fracture risk in either sex. We report that global deletion of programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) broadly results in bone loss in skeletally mature male and female PD-1−/− mice, with a sexually divergent phenotype in adolescent mice, decreased bone strength in adult males and young females, and expansion of multiple T cell subsets in the bone marrow. In a model of pharmacologic PD-1 blockade, administration of α-PD-1 to mimic the adjuvant setting reduced bone mass, expanded multiple T cell subsets in the bone marrow, and increased osteoclast activity and resorptive capacity. T cell deficient mice were resistant to osteoclast-mediated bone loss following α-PD-1 therapy, suggesting that T cells in the bone marrow are necessary for bone loss in the setting of immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy. These findings may be leveraged to identify patients at greater fracture risk following ICI therapy due to enrichment of effector T cell populations in the bone marrow.
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