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Exhausted T cell signature predicts immunotherapy response in ER-positive breast cancer.

Authors :
Terranova-Barberio M
Pawlowska N
Dhawan M
Moasser M
Chien AJ
Melisko ME
Rugo H
Rahimi R
Deal T
Daud A
Rosenblum MD
Thomas S
Munster PN
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2020 Jul 17; Vol. 11 (1), pp. 3584. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jul 17.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Responses to immunotherapy are uncommon in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer and to date, lack predictive markers. This randomized phase II study defines safety and response rate of epigenetic priming in ER-positive breast cancer patients treated with checkpoint inhibitors as primary endpoints. Secondary and exploratory endpoints included PD-L1 modulation and T-cell immune-signatures. 34 patients received vorinostat, tamoxifen and pembrolizumab with no excessive toxicity after progression on a median of five prior metastatic regimens. Objective response was 4% and clinical benefit rate (CR + PR + SD > 6 m) was 19%. T-cell exhaustion (CD8 <superscript>+ </superscript> PD-1 <superscript>+</superscript> /CTLA-4 <superscript>+</superscript> ) and treatment-induced depletion of regulatory T-cells (CD4 <superscript>+</superscript> Foxp3 <superscript>+</superscript> /CTLA-4 <superscript>+</superscript> ) was seen in tumor or blood in 5/5 patients with clinical benefit, but only in one non-responder. Tumor lymphocyte infiltration was 0.17%. Only two non-responders had PD-L1 expression >1%. This data defines a novel immune signature in PD-L1-negative ER-positive breast cancer patients who are more likely to benefit from immune-checkpoint and histone deacetylase inhibition (NCT02395627).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32681091
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17414-y