Back to Search Start Over

Data from Improved T-cell Immunity Following Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Ovarian Cancer

Authors :
Panagiotis A. Konstantinopoulos
Derin B. Keskin
Catherine J. Wu
Ursula A. Matulonis
Guanglan Zhang
Donna Neuberg
Kenneth J. Livak
Jennifer Curtis
Elizabeth H. Stover
Joyce F. Liu
Courtney Qi
Julia Fasse
Laura Frackiewicz
Phuong Le
Su-Chun Cheng
Shuqiang Li
Teddy Huang
Isabel Carulli
Vipheaviny Chea
Anna Tarren
MacLean Sellars
Livius Penter
Nabihah Tayob
Min Liu
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Although local tissue-based immune responses are critical for elucidating direct tumor–immune cell interactions, peripheral immune responses are increasingly recognized as occupying an important role in anticancer immunity. We evaluated serial blood samples from patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) undergoing standard-of-care neoadjuvant carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy (including dexamethasone for prophylaxis of paclitaxel-associated hypersensitivity reactions) to characterize the evolution of the peripheral immune cell function and composition across the course of therapy.Experimental Design:Serial blood samples from 10 patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) were collected before the initiation of chemotherapy, after the third and sixth cycles, and approximately 2 months after completion of chemotherapy. T-cell function was evaluated using ex vivo IFNγ ELISpot assays, and the dynamics of T-cell repertoire and immune cell composition were assessed using bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing (RNAseq).Results:T cells exhibited an improved response to viral antigens after NACT, which paralleled the decrease in CA125 levels. Single-cell analysis revealed increased numbers of memory T-cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes and increased central memory CD8+ and regulatory T cells throughout chemotherapy. Finally, administration of NACT was associated with increased monocyte frequency and expression of HLA class II and antigen presentation genes; single-cell RNAseq analyses showed that although driven largely by classical monocytes, increased class II gene expression was a feature observed across monocyte subpopulations after chemotherapy.Conclusions:NACT may alleviate tumor-associated immunosuppression by reducing tumor burden and may enhance antigen processing and presentation. These findings have implications for the successful combinatorial applications of immune checkpoint blockade and therapeutic vaccine approaches in EOC.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a919dae4d7665857a5fe53b0b66749ba