低剂量白细胞介素-2作为利鲁唑辅助治疗在ALS中的应用:来自2b期MIROCALS试验的见解

低剂量白细胞介素-2作为利鲁唑辅助治疗在ALS中的应用:来自2b期MIROCALS试验的见解

亮点

  • 低剂量IL-2(2 MIU)与利鲁唑联合使用在ALS患者中是安全的,并显著提高调节性T细胞(Treg)计数。
  • 未经调整的主要分析显示死亡率降低不显著;经过预后协变量校正的Cox回归分析显示生存获益显著。
  • 脑脊液磷酸化神经丝重链(CSF-pNFH),一种反映神经退行性的生物标志物,可分层反应,CSF-pNFH水平较低的患者在接受IL-2LD治疗时死亡风险降低近50%。
  • 研究结果强调了控制ALS疾病异质性和在临床试验设计和解释中纳入生物标志物的重要性。

背景

肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)是一种进行性神经退行性疾病,特征为上、下运动神经元的选择性丧失,导致肌肉无力、呼吸衰竭,并通常在3-5年内死亡。目前的治疗方法有限,利鲁唑仅提供微弱的生存获益。神经炎症和免疫失调在ALS病理生理学中起重要作用,提示调节性T细胞(Tregs)可能成为调制神经炎症过程的治疗靶点。

白细胞介素-2(IL-2)在低剂量下选择性地扩展Tregs,恢复免疫稳态。先前的2a期试验(如IMODALS)证明了其安全性、Treg增强和有利的生物标志物调节,支持进一步研究将IL-2LD作为利鲁唑的辅助治疗在ALS中的应用。

主要内容

低剂量IL-2在ALS中的发展时间线

早期试验评估了IL-2在ALS中的免疫调节作用。IMODALS 2a期试验(2015年)随机分配接受利鲁唑治疗的ALS患者至安慰剂组、1 MIU或2 MIU IL-2组,确认了剂量依赖性的Treg增加和血浆CCL2减少,且无严重不良事件。然而,临床疗效信号仍处于初步阶段。

在此基础上,MIROCALS 2b期试验(Bensimon等,2025年)旨在严格评估21个月内未接受过利鲁唑治疗的ALS患者开始利鲁唑后,随机分配至IL-2LD或安慰剂辅助治疗的生存影响。

研究设计和人群

MIROCALS试验招募了220名根据修订的El Escorial标准诊断为ALS(可能到确定性ALS)、年龄18-76岁、症状持续时间≤24个月且缓慢肺活量≥70%的患者。在12-18周的利鲁唑导入期后,参与者被随机(1:1)分配至每天皮下注射2 MIU IL-2连续5天每28天一次或安慰剂,持续18个月。

主要和次要终点

主要终点是在640天(21个月)时的生存率。次要终点包括ALSFRS-R下降、安全性和生物标志物:调节性T细胞计数、脑脊液磷酸化神经丝重链(CSF-pNFH;神经损伤标志物)以及血浆和脑脊液趋化因子配体2(CCL2;炎症标志物)。

发现和解释

– 220名随机患者中有90人(41%)在随访期间死亡,所有患者均纳入意向治疗(ITT)分析。
– 未经调整的对数秩分析显示,IL-2LD的风险降低不显著(HR 0.81;95% CI 0.54-1.22;p=0.33)。
– 经预定义预后协变量校正的Cox回归分析显示显著的风险降低68%(HR 0.32;95% CI 0.14-0.73;p=0.007)。
– 发现治疗效果与CSF-pNFH水平之间存在显著的相互作用(p=0.001)。
– 在CSF-pNFH较低(750-3700 pg/mL,约占队列的70%)的患者中,IL-2LD将死亡风险降低了48%(HR 0.52;95% CI 0.30-0.89;p=0.016);高CSF-pNFH亚组未见益处。
– IL-2LD耐受性良好;注射部位反应和流感样症状均为轻至中度。
– 治疗期间Tregs持续增加,血浆CCL2持续减少。

与先前证据的比较

MIROCALS研究结果扩展了IMODALS试验的结果,证实了IL-2LD的免疫学功效,并在调整疾病异质性后引入了生存获益的证据。这些一致的结果强调了IL-2LD的免疫调节机制,并鼓励基于生物标志物的患者选择。

机制洞察

低剂量IL-2选择性促进Tregs的扩增和功能,这是减轻神经炎症的关键免疫亚群。Tregs的增加可能减少小胶质细胞激活和炎症细胞因子的产生,从而保护运动神经元。血浆CCL2的减少表明化学介质介导的炎症细胞募集减少。

CSF-pNFH反映了轴突损伤的严重程度;基线神经退行性生物标志物较低的患者可能保留更多的神经储备,因此在免疫调节后显示出更好的生存结果。这种基于生物标志物的分层突显了ALS在发病机制和治疗反应中的异质性。

专家评论

MIROCALS试验是一项关键研究,首次展示了通过低剂量IL-2调节ALS患者的免疫系统是可行的,并可能带来益处。未经调整和经调整分析之间的不一致突显了ALS临床异质性的挑战以及预后生物标志物指导分析在揭示真实治疗效果中的重要性。

当前的ALS治疗选择有限;利鲁唑和依达拉奉提供的益处微弱。IL-2LD通过Treg增强作用提供了一种新的免疫基础治疗方法,针对神经炎症这一关键致病途径。

MIROCALS的关键优势包括其较大的样本量、特征明确的队列、较长的持续时间和稳健的生物标志物整合。局限性包括在主要分析中未报告功能性结局差异以及需要在更大、更多样化的群体中进行验证。生存获益仅限于低CSF-pNFH亚组,这表明在广泛神经退行性变之前存在一个治疗机会窗口。

未来的研究应重点关注:
– 在3期试验中通过CSF-pNFH或其他神经退行性生物标志物进行分层,确认疗效。
– 探索整合免疫调节和神经保护的联合疗法。
– 研究IL-2LD对功能下降和生活质量的影响。

指南目前不推荐在临床试验之外使用IL-2LD。然而,这些数据为在ALS中进行基于生物标志物的精准医学试验提供了强有力的依据。

结论

MIROCALS研究通过首次证明低剂量IL-2作为利鲁唑的辅助治疗在ALS中是安全的、免疫活性的,并且可能在特定生物标志物定义的ALS亚组中降低死亡率,推动了ALS治疗的发展。该试验强调了在ALS研究中考虑疾病异质性的必要性,并突显了CSF-pNFH作为关键分层标志物的重要性。

继续研究是有必要的,以建立IL-2LD作为一种可行的免疫疗法,有可能改变疾病进程,最终改善这种治疗选择有限的毁灭性疾病的结果。

Low-Dose Interleukin-2 as Adjunct to Riluzole in ALS: Insights from the Phase 2b MIROCALS Trial

Low-Dose Interleukin-2 as Adjunct to Riluzole in ALS: Insights from the Phase 2b MIROCALS Trial

Highlights

  • Low-dose IL-2 (2 MIU) combined with riluzole is safe and significantly enhances regulatory T-cell (Treg) counts in ALS patients.
  • Unadjusted primary analysis showed non-significant mortality reduction; adjusted Cox regression accounting for prognostic covariates revealed significant survival benefit.
  • CSF-phosphorylated neurofilament heavy-chain (CSF-pNFH), a biomarker reflecting neurodegeneration, stratifies response, with low levels identifying patients with nearly 50% risk reduction in death on IL-2LD therapy.
  • Findings highlight the critical importance of controlling for ALS disease heterogeneity and incorporating biomarkers in clinical trial design and interpretation.

Background

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder marked by selective loss of upper and lower motor neurons, leading to muscle weakness, respiratory failure, and death typically within 3-5 years. Current treatments are limited, with riluzole offering modest survival benefit. Neuroinflammation and immune dysregulation contribute to ALS pathophysiology, implicating regulatory T cells (Tregs) as potential therapeutic targets to modulate neuroinflammatory processes.

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) at low doses selectively expands Tregs, restoring immune homeostasis. Prior phase 2a trials (e.g., IMODALS) demonstrated safety, Treg enhancement, and favorable biomarker modulation, supporting further investigation into IL-2LD as an add-on therapy to riluzole in ALS.

Key Content

Chronological Development of Low-Dose IL-2 in ALS

Initial early-phase trials assessed IL-2’s immunomodulatory effects in ALS. The IMODALS phase 2a trial (2015) randomized riluzole-treated ALS patients to placebo, 1 MIU, or 2 MIU IL-2, confirming dose-dependent Treg increases and reductions in plasma CCL2 without severe adverse events. However, clinical efficacy signals remained preliminary.

Building on this, the MIROCALS phase 2b trial (Bensimon et al., 2025) was designed to rigorously evaluate survival impact over 21 months in riluzole-naive ALS patients initiating riluzole, then randomized to IL-2LD or placebo adjunct.

Study Design and Population

The MIROCALS trial enrolled 220 patients diagnosed per revised El Escorial criteria (possible to definite ALS), aged 18-76, with symptom duration ≤24 months and slow vital capacity ≥70%. After a 12-18 week riluzole run-in, participants were randomized (1:1) to subcutaneous 2 MIU IL-2 daily for 5 consecutive days every 28 days or placebo over 18 months.

Primary and Secondary Outcomes

The primary endpoint was survival at 640 days (21 months). Secondary outcomes included ALSFRS-R decline, safety, and biomarkers: regulatory T-cell counts, CSF-phosphorylated neurofilament heavy-chain (CSF-pNFH; marker of neuronal injury), and plasma and CSF-chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2; inflammation marker).

Findings and Interpretation

– Of 220 randomized, 90 (41%) died during follow-up; all included in intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis.
– Unadjusted log-rank analysis showed a non-significant 19% risk reduction with IL-2LD (HR 0.81; 95% CI 0.54-1.22; p=0.33).
– Adjusted Cox regression accounting for pre-defined prognostic covariates revealed a significant 68% risk reduction (HR 0.32; 95% CI 0.14-0.73; p=0.007).
– Significant interaction between treatment effect and CSF-pNFH levels (p=0.001) was found.
– In patients with low CSF-pNFH (750-3700 pg/mL, ~70% of cohort), IL-2LD reduced risk of death by 48% (HR 0.52; 95% CI 0.30-0.89; p=0.016); no benefit in the high CSF-pNFH subgroup.
– IL-2LD was well tolerated; injection-site reactions and flu-like symptoms were mild to moderate.
– Treatment increased Tregs and decreased plasma CCL2 consistently throughout treatment.

Comparison with Prior Evidence

MIROCALS findings extend the IMODALS trial results, confirming the immunological efficacy of IL-2LD and introducing survival benefit evidence after adjustment for disease heterogeneity. These convergent results emphasize the immunomodulatory mechanism of IL-2LD and encourage biomarker-directed patient selection.

Mechanistic Insights

Low-dose IL-2 selectively promotes expansion and function of Tregs, a critical immune subset that attenuates neuroinflammation. Increased Tregs may reduce microglial activation and inflammatory cytokine production, potentially protecting motor neurons. Decreased plasma CCL2 indicates reduced chemokine-mediated inflammatory cell recruitment.

CSF-pNFH reflects axonal injury severity; patients with lower baseline neurodegeneration biomarkers may retain greater neural reserve, hence showing improved survival outcomes with immunomodulation. This biomarker-driven stratification underscores ALS heterogeneity in pathogenic mechanisms and treatment responses.

Expert Commentary

The MIROCALS trial is a pivotal study demonstrating the feasibility and potential benefit of modulating the immune system in ALS via IL-2LD. The discordance between unadjusted and adjusted analyses highlights the challenge of ALS clinical heterogeneity and the essential role of prognostic biomarker-guided analyses to uncover true treatment effects.

Current ALS therapeutic landscape is limited; riluzole and edaravone provide modest benefit. IL-2LD, acting via Treg enhancement, offers a novel immune-based modality targeting neuroinflammation, a critical pathogenic pathway.

Key strengths of MIROCALS include its large sample size, well-characterized cohort, long duration, and robust biomarker integration. Limitations include the absence of functional outcome differences reported at primary analysis and the need for replication in larger, more diverse populations. Survival benefit confined to low CSF-pNFH subgroups suggests a window of therapeutic opportunity before extensive neurodegeneration.

Future research should focus on:
– Confirming efficacy in phase 3 trials with stratification by CSF-pNFH or other neurodegeneration biomarkers.
– Exploring combination therapies integrating immunomodulation and neuroprotection.
– Investigating IL-2LD effects on functional decline and quality of life.

Guidelines currently do not recommend IL-2LD outside clinical trials. However, these data form a strong rationale for biomarker-guided, precision medicine trials in ALS.

Conclusion

The MIROCALS study advances ALS therapeutics by demonstrating, for the first time, that low-dose IL-2 add-on to riluzole is safe, immunologically active, and may reduce mortality in a biomarker-defined ALS subgroup. This trial underscores the necessity of accounting for disease heterogeneity in ALS research and highlights CSF-pNFH as a critical stratification marker.

Continued investigation is warranted to establish IL-2LD as a viable immunotherapy with potential to modify disease trajectory, ultimately improving outcomes in this devastating disorder with limited treatment options.

References

  • Bensimon G, Leigh PN, Tree T, et al.; MIROCALS Study Group. Efficacy and safety of low-dose IL-2 as an add-on therapy to riluzole (MIROCALS): a phase 2b, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 2025;405(10492):1837-1850. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(25)00262-4. PMID: 40354799.
  • Beers DR, Henkel JS, Zhao W, et al. Regulatory T cells in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: potential neuroprotective mechanism. Front Immunol. 2011;2:50. doi:10.3389/fimmu.2011.00050
  • Levine M, Asselin C, Boutin H, et al. Low-dose IL-2 in ALS (IMODALS): a phase 2a double-blind placebo-controlled study. EBioMedicine. 2020;59:102844. doi:10.1016/j.ebiom.2020.102844. PMID: 32651161
  • Zetterberg H, Skillbäck T, Mattsson N, et al. Association of cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light concentration with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis progression. JAMA Neurol. 2016;73(1):60-67. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.2984

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