Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
So you’re saying high NK cell is a result of a disease subtype not the drug mechanism? That is not good at all…
Also if Dara works by blocking CD38 in tissues then once it’s gone surely problems come back …
Why would it not be good for the NK cell levels to indicate subtypes?
Problems would not come back if by temporarily blocking CD38 daratumumab allowed a vicious cycle of unwanted cell activation to collapse. If, for instance, the cycle was fed by subpopulations of T cells misinterpreting each others' signals in tissue compartments that had been expanded to a critical level then calming everything down might drop things below that level. In psoriasis we see T cells arguing with other cells in skin and other tissues for months or years but then quietening down. In Reiter's they argue for a few months and then usually give up long term. If you abolish inflammation in a knee joint with a high local dose of steroid you can induce resolution of the local inflammation for good. So we know that T cell based interactions can sometimes be switched off with a one off intervention.
(When I say T cells here I am really meaning any non-B lymphocyte subset you like, including NK, MAIT etc.)