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Agonistic CD40 elicits CD8+ T-cell-dependent primary responses and CD4+ T-cell-dependent long-term immunity in breast cancer.

NPJ breast cancer 2026 Vol.12(1) p. 25

Lam C, Lanchoney O, Maddipatla V, Markosyan N, Joshi N, Hu X, Ray Fofana C, Zeng S, DeMatteo RP, Vonderheide RH, Zhang JQ

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There has been marked improvement in the clinical outcome of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) with the use of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) although serious immune-related adverse effects are n

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APA Lam C, Lanchoney O, et al. (2026). Agonistic CD40 elicits CD8+ T-cell-dependent primary responses and CD4+ T-cell-dependent long-term immunity in breast cancer.. NPJ breast cancer, 12(1), 25. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-025-00889-7
MLA Lam C, et al.. "Agonistic CD40 elicits CD8+ T-cell-dependent primary responses and CD4+ T-cell-dependent long-term immunity in breast cancer.." NPJ breast cancer, vol. 12, no. 1, 2026, pp. 25.
PMID 41530189

Abstract

There has been marked improvement in the clinical outcome of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) with the use of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) although serious immune-related adverse effects are not uncommon. However, other subtypes including luminal ER+ and HER2+ breast cancers are largely unresponsive to ICB. Approximately 35% of TNBCs also do not fully respond to ICB. Here we hypothesize that improving priming by cross-presenting conventional dendritic cells (cDCs) with an agonistic CD40 antibody (aCD40) may be complementary to ICB. Systemic administration of aCD40 induced T cell proliferation and activation in tumor-draining lymph nodes and attracted effector T cells to the tumor bed from the periphery. This effect was largely due to activation and maturation of type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s). aCD40 alone slowed tumor growth and its combination with ICB cured tumor-bearing mice, accomplishing a "vaccine effect" and the immune-mediated rejection of tumor rechallenge. The anti-tumor effect of aCD40 was cDC1 and CD8 + T cell-dependent, whereas the rejection of secondary tumor rechallenge in cured mice required CD4 + T cells. Importantly, intra-tumoral administration of aCD40 combined with systemic or intra-tumoral ICB-to mimic neoadjuvant therapeutic approaches-induced complete regressions of both treated and distant tumors. These findings demonstrate aCD40 efficacy in preclinical models of breast cancer and further supports intra-tumoral administration of both aCD40 and ICB as an effective treatment that might limit systemic exposure and lower risk of immune-related toxicity.

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