B cell depletion therapy does not resolve chronic active multiple sclerosis lesions.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_4C906A17A400
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
B cell depletion therapy does not resolve chronic active multiple sclerosis lesions.
Journal
EBioMedicine
Author(s)
Maggi P., Bulcke C.V., Pedrini E., Bugli C., Sellimi A., Wynen M., Stölting A., Mullins W.A., Kalaitzidis G., Lolli V., Perrotta G., El Sankari S., Duprez T., Li X., Calabresi P.A., van Pesch V., Reich D.S., Absinta M.
ISSN
2352-3964 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2352-3964
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
94
Pages
104701
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Chronic active lesions (CAL) in multiple sclerosis (MS) have been observed even in patients taking high-efficacy disease-modifying therapy, including B-cell depletion. Given that CAL are a major determinant of clinical progression, including progression independent of relapse activity (PIRA), understanding the predicted activity and real-world effects of targeting specific lymphocyte populations is critical for designing next-generation treatments to mitigate chronic inflammation in MS.
We analyzed published lymphocyte single-cell transcriptomes from MS lesions and bioinformatically predicted the effects of depleting lymphocyte subpopulations (including CD20 B-cells) from CAL via gene-regulatory-network machine-learning analysis. Motivated by the results, we performed in vivo MRI assessment of PRL changes in 72 adults with MS, 46 treated with anti-CD20 antibodies and 26 untreated, over ∼2 years.
Although only 4.3% of lymphocytes in CAL were CD20 B-cells, their depletion is predicted to affect microglial genes involved in iron/heme metabolism, hypoxia, and antigen presentation. In vivo, tracking 202 PRL (150 treated) and 175 non-PRL (124 treated), none of the treated paramagnetic rims disappeared at follow-up, nor was there a treatment effect on PRL for lesion volume, magnetic susceptibility, or T1 time. PIRA occurred in 20% of treated patients, more frequently in those with ≥4 PRL (p = 0.027).
Despite predicted effects on microglia-mediated inflammatory networks in CAL and iron metabolism, anti-CD20 therapies do not fully resolve PRL after 2-year MRI follow up. Limited tissue turnover of B-cells, inefficient passage of anti-CD20 antibodies across the blood-brain-barrier, and a paucity of B-cells in CAL could explain our findings.
Intramural Research Program of NINDS, NIH; NINDS grants R01NS082347 and R01NS082347; Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation; Cariplo Foundation (grant #1677), FRRB Early Career Award (grant #1750327); Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS).
Keywords
Adult, Humans, Multiple Sclerosis/metabolism, B-Lymphocytes, Blood-Brain Barrier/metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Iron, Anti-CD20 treatment, Machine learning, Paramagnetic rims, Single cell RNA sequencing, Susceptibility-based MRI
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
13/07/2023 13:47
Last modification date
14/12/2023 8:11
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