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Characterization of the Immune Landscape of EGFR-Mutant NSCLC Identifies CD73/Adenosine Pathway as a Potential Therapeutic Target

Authors :
Lixia Diao
Esra A. Akbay
Linghua Wang
Won-Chul Lee
Kwok-Kin Wong
Don L. Gibbons
Luisa M. Solis Soto
Ruiping Wang
Stephen G. Swisher
Jing Wang
Runzhe Chen
Roohussaba Khairullah
You Hong Fan
Alexandre Reuben
Mingrui Zhu
Jack A. Roth
Boris Sepesi
Irene Guijarro Munoz
John V. Heymach
Carmen Behrens
Jianhua Zhang
Jacqulyne P. Robichaux
Marcelo V. Negrao
Humam Kadara
Edwin R. Parra
Monique B. Nilsson
Lorenzo Federico
Tatiana Karpinets
Ignacio I. Wistuba
Chantale Bernatchez
Jianjun Zhang
Daniel J. McGrail
S. Patel
Xiuning Le
Ara A. Vaporciyan
Yasir Elamin
Cara Haymaker
Jun Li
Lauren Averett Byers
Source :
Journal of Thoracic Oncology. 16:583-600
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Lung adenocarcinomas harboring EGFR mutations do not respond to immune checkpoint blockade therapy and their EGFR wildtype counterpart. The mechanisms underlying this lack of clinical response have been investigated but remain incompletely understood. Methods We analyzed three cohorts of resected lung adenocarcinomas (Profiling of Resistance Patterns of Oncogenic Signaling Pathways in Evaluation of Cancer of Thorax, Immune Genomic Profiling of NSCLC, and The Cancer Genome Atlas) and compared tumor immune microenvironment of EGFR-mutant tumors to EGFR wildtype tumors, to identify actionable regulators to target and potentially enhance the treatment response. Results EGFR-mutant NSCLC exhibited low programmed death-ligand 1, low tumor mutational burden, decreased number of cytotoxic T cells, and low T cell receptor clonality, consistent with an immune-inert phenotype, though T cell expansion ex vivo was preserved. In an analysis of 75 immune checkpoint genes, the top up-regulated genes in the EGFR-mutant tumors (NT5E and ADORA1) belonged to the CD73/adenosine pathway. Single-cell analysis revealed that the tumor cell population expressed CD73, both in the treatment-naive and resistant tumors. Using coculture systems with EGFR-mutant NSCLC cells, T regulatory cell proportion was decreased with CD73 knockdown. In an immune-competent mouse model of EGFR-mutant lung cancer, the CD73/adenosine pathway was markedly up-regulated and CD73 blockade significantly inhibited tumor growth. Conclusions Our work revealed that EGFR-mutant NSCLC has an immune-inert phenotype. We identified the CD73/adenosine pathway as a potential therapeutic target for EGFR-mutant NSCLC.

Details

ISSN :
15560864
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Thoracic Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e1f50e4cd521ac560e21985ee98c94a1