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IL-7 Level May Mark Interferon Responsiveness

November 14, 2011

Serum levels of interleukin-7 helped determine which patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis would benefit from treatment with interferon-beta in a series of experiments involving human sera and mice with experimental autoimmune encephalo-myelitis.

Patients with high IL-7 levels had a T helper cell type 1 (TH1) form of MS that has been shown to respond better to interferon-beta therapy than does the TH17 form of MS.

“These results not only help to clarify our understanding of a genetic risk factor associated with MS but also suggest new predictive, mechanism-based measurements for MS patient stratification,” wrote Li-Fen Lee, Ph.D., of Pfizer, and her colleagues (Sci. Transl. Med.2011;3:93ra68).

The study brings together findings from earlier reports that in totality suggested that IL-7 and its receptor, IL-7R-alpha, may be involved the pathogenesis of MS. Several genome-wide association studies have pointed to a single nucleotide polymorphism in the gene encoding IL-7R-alpha that confers increased susceptibility to MS. In another study, patients with MS had higher levels of both IL-7R and IL-7 mRNA in cerebrospinal fluid than did patients with noninflammatory neurological diseases. And other studies have shown that IL-7/IL-7R-alpha signaling is necessary for the survival of T lymphocytes in humans and animal models.

Using cells from 26 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), Dr. Lee and coauthors found that in both cases, IL-7 promotes the differentiation of naive T cells into TH1 cells, but not TH17 cells. Mice that were given IL-7 after EAE was established and paralysis had begun experienced worsened symptoms, whereas those that were given an antagonist IL-7R-alpha antibody had reduced disease severity.

Previous studies have suggested that interferon-beta (IFN-beta) treatment prevents EAE in mice with pathogenic TH1 cells before symptom onset, yet it exacerbates the disease when given to mice with the TH17 form of EAE.

The investigators examined the relationship between MS type and response to IFN-beta treatment in the 26 patients.

The level of IL-7 in serum was significantly associated with the rate of relapse. In the 2 years after treatment with IFN-beta, there were no relapses in 5 of 5 patients with an IL-7 level greater than 150 pg/mL, compared with no relapses in 7 of 21 patients with an IL-7 level less than 150 pg/mL.

“Our finding of a role for IL-7 in directing and promoting the generation of human TH1 cells … is entirely consistent with the elevated IL-7 levels seen in patients with the IFN-beta-responsive form of MS,” the investigators wrote.

They concluded that “it is possible that serum IL-7 level may be useful for predicting clinical benefit from IFN-beta treatment in [relapsing remitting MS] patients. It is conceivable that patients with high levels of serum IL-7 might directly benefit from potential new therapies targeting either IL-7 or its receptor.”

The study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and a National Multiple Sclerosis Society fellowship. Dr. Lee and eight other authors are employees of Pfizer, which has filed a patent application titled, “Antagonist Anti-IL-7 Receptor Antibodies and Methods” with three of the authors. Stanford University and two of the authors have filed a separate patent application for “Markers for Determination of Patient Responsiveness.” The remaining seven authors declared having no competing interests.

Adviser’s Viewpoint

 

 

Validation, Additional Data Needed

This manuscript explores the role of IL-7 in MS and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in mice. The authors present data showing that high serum levels of IL-7, especially in association with low levels of IL-17F, predict a good clinical response to interferon-beta (IFN-beta) therapy in MS. They also show that IL-7 can induce TH1, but not TH17, cell differentiation in both humans and mice. They postulate a “TH1-driven” form of MS responsive to IFN-beta and a “TH17-driven” form of MS not responsive to IFN-beta. Use of IL-7R-alpha-blocking antibodies in EAE before or after onset of paralysis resulted in reduced severity of EAE, reductions in peripheral naive and activated T cells, and reduced lymphocyte infiltration into the central nervous system.

The authors propose that such IL-7R-alpha-blocking antibodies may be effective in treatment of MS. These results are exciting, and suggest that we may be able to predict an individual’s response to treatment with IFN-beta or other MS therapies by looking at induction of specific cytokines. This would be a major advance in a field where we treat patients with a variety of disease-modifying therapies with very little knowledge of how individual responses to therapy may vary.

However, there are a few cautions to keep in mind when reviewing these results. The results are preliminary, and based on a retrospective sample of 26 patients treated with IFN-beta for at least 12 months. Two blinded neurologists classified the patients as responders or nonresponders based on historical data on the number of relapses and steroid treatments in the 2 years before initiation of therapy, compared with 2 years after starting therapy. No MRI data were reported to assess for subclinical disease activity, and neutralizing antibody status to IFN-beta was also not reported. The “high IL-7, low IL-17F” group comprised only five patients, who had an average of two relapses in the 2 years preceding treatment and no relapses in the 2 years during treatment with IFN-beta.

These results obviously need to be validated in a larger, prospectively determined cohort with appropriate MRI monitoring for subclinical MS disease activity. Past experience with MS clinical trials and our evolving knowledge of the complexity of the immune alterations in MS suggest that focusing on changes in one or two cytokines and concepts such at “TH1-driven” and “TH17-driven” forms of the disease are likely oversimplifications, although they may serve as useful constructs for future investigation.

JONATHAN L. CARTER, M.D., is an associate professor of neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz. He specializes in multiple sclerosis, optic neuritis, transverse myelitis, and neuroimmunology. He has no relevant disclosures.

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