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Single-cell polyfunctional proteomics of CD4 cells from patients with AML predicts responses to anti–PD-1–based therapy

Authors :
Ghayas C. Issa
Elias Jabbour
Steven M. Kornblau
Matthew Cyr
Naval Daver
Mansour Alfayez
Guillermo Garcia-Manero
Jairo Matthews
Sean G Mackay
Zoe Alaniz
Hussein A. Abbas
Marina Konopleva
Jing Zhou
Michael Andreeff
Source :
Blood Advances
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2021.

Abstract

Key Points Effector polyfunctional index score of CD4 cells was more associated with responses to combined azacitidine/nivolumab than CD8 cells.Single-cell biomarker assays can be used in predicting responses to immune-based therapies.<br />Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains a difficult disease to treat disease. In a phase 2 clinical trial in patients with relapsed/refractory AML, combining the hypomethylating agent, azacitidine, with the PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor, nivolumab, demonstrated encouraging response rates (33%), median event-free, and overall survival, compared with a historical cohort of contemporary patients treated with azacitidine-based therapies, with an acceptable safety profile. Biomarkers of response are yet to be determined. In this study, we leveraged a multiplexed immune assay to assess the functional states of CD4+ and CD8+ cells at a single-cell level in pretherapy bone marrows in 16 patients with relapsed/refractory AML treated with azacitidine/nivolumab. Effector CD4+ but not CD8+ cells had distinct polyfunctional groups and were associated with responses and better outcomes. Further evaluation of the polyfunctional strength index composition across cell types revealed that interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) were the major drivers of enhanced polyfunctionality index of pretherapy CD4+ subset, whereas Granzyme B, IFN-γ, MIP-1b, and TNF-α drove the nonsignificantly enhanced pretreatment Polyfunctional Strength Index of CD8+ subset in the responders. Single-cell polyfunctional assays were predictive of response in AML and may have a potential role as a biomarker in the wider sphere of immunotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
24739537 and 24739529
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e4f1a858e6c74e595268f703d65cd02