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Characterising how a single bout of exercise in people with myeloma affects clonal plasma cell and immune effector cell frequency in blood, and daratumumab efficacy in vitro

Collier-Bain, Harrison D.; Emery, Annabelle; Brown, Frankie F.; Causer, Adam J.; Oliver, Rebecca; Eddy, Rachel; Leach, Shoji; Graby, John; Augustine, Daniel; Moore, Sally; Crowe, Josephine; Murray, James; Turner, James E.; Campbell, John P.

Authors

Harrison D. Collier-Bain

Annabelle Emery

Frankie F. Brown

Adam J. Causer

Rebecca Oliver

Rachel Eddy

Shoji Leach

John Graby

Daniel Augustine

Sally Moore

Josephine Crowe

James Murray

James E. Turner

John P. Campbell



Abstract

Multiple myeloma is a haematological cancer characterised by the accumulation of clonal plasma cells in the bone marrow and is commonly treated with daratumumab, an anti-CD38 monoclonal antibody immunotherapy. Daratumumab often fails to induce stringent complete responses, due in part to resistance to antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) exerted by natural killer (NK)-cells and monocytes. Exercise bouts undertaken by healthy people induce lymphocytosis in blood, including to NK-cells and B-cells, but the effects of exercise are unknown in myeloma patients. In addition, whether exercise mobilises plasma cells has not been adequately investigated, and as such the potential impact of exercise on daratumumab treatment is unclear. In this exploratory pilot study, n = 16 smouldering multiple myeloma participants enrolled and n = 9 completed the study which comprised a bout of cycling 15% above anaerobic threshold for ∼30-minutes, with blood samples collected pre-, immediately post-, and 30-minutes post-exercise. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated from blood samples and incubated with the RPMI-8226 plasmacytoma cell line, with or without the presence of daratumumab to determine specific lysis using a calcein-release assay. Daratumumab-mediated cell lysis increased from 18.8% to 23.2% pre- to post-exercise, respectively (p < 0.001), owing to an increased frequency of CD3−CD56+CD16+ NK-cells (+348%), HLA-DR+CD14dimCD16+ monocytes (+125%), and HLA-DR+CD14+CD32+ monocytes (+41%) in blood (p < 0.01). However, overall, total plasma cells (CD38+CD138+) nor clonal plasma cells (CD38brightCD138+CD45−/dimCD19− with light-chain restriction) increased in blood (p > 0.05). Notably, we observed a 305% increase in NK-cells expressing CD38, the daratumumab target antigen, which might render NK-cells more susceptible to daratumumab-mediated fratricide – whereby NK-cells initiate ADCC against daratumumab-bound NK-cells. In conclusion, exercise modestly improved the efficacy of daratumumab-mediated ADCC in vitro. However, plasma cells were largely unchanged, and NK-cells expressing CD38 – the daratumumab target antigen – increased in blood. Future research should consider the optimal timings of exercise during daratumumab treatment in myeloma to avert exacerbation of daratumumab-mediated NK-cell lysis.

Citation

Collier-Bain, H. D., Emery, A., Brown, F. F., Causer, A. J., Oliver, R., Eddy, R., Leach, S., Graby, J., Augustine, D., Moore, S., Crowe, J., Murray, J., Turner, J. E., & Campbell, J. P. (2024). Characterising how a single bout of exercise in people with myeloma affects clonal plasma cell and immune effector cell frequency in blood, and daratumumab efficacy in vitro. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity - Health, 42, Article 100865. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2024.100865

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 16, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 19, 2024
Publication Date 2024-12
Deposit Date Sep 30, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 30, 2024
Journal Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
Electronic ISSN 2666-3546
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 42
Article Number 100865
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2024.100865
Keywords Myeloma, Daratumumab, Exercise, ADCC4 NK-cells, monocytes, B-cells

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