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Reverse Translating Molecular Determinants of Anti–Programmed Death 1 Immunotherapy Response in Mouse Syngeneic Tumor Models

Authors :
Peter Georgiev
Eric S. Muise
Douglas E. Linn
Marlene C. Hinton
Yun Wang
Mingmei Cai
Louise Cadzow
Douglas C. Wilson
Selvakumar Sukumar
Michael Caniga
Lan Chen
Hui Xiao
Jennifer H. Yearley
Venkataraman Sriram
Michael Nebozhyn
Manjiri Sathe
Wendy M. Blumenschein
Kimberly S. Kerr
Heather A. Hirsch
Sarah Javaid
Aleksandra K. Olow
Lily Y. Moy
Derek Y. Chiang
Andrey Loboda
Razvan Cristescu
Svetlana Sadekova
Brian J. Long
Terrill K. McClanahan
Elaine M. Pinheiro
Source :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 21:427-439
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2022.

Abstract

Targeting the programmed death 1/programmed death ligand 1 (PD-1/PD-L1) pathway with immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of many cancers. Somatic tumor mutational burden (TMB) and T-cell–inflamed gene expression profile (GEP) are clinically validated pan-tumor genomic biomarkers that can predict responsiveness to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 monotherapy in many tumor types. We analyzed the association between these biomarkers and the efficacy of PD-1 inhibitor in 11 commonly used preclinical syngeneic tumor mouse models using murinized rat anti-mouse PD-1 DX400 antibody muDX400, a surrogate for pembrolizumab. Response to muDX400 treatment was broadly classified into three categories: highly responsive, partially responsive, and intrinsically resistant to therapy. Molecular and cellular profiling validated differences in immune cell infiltration and activation in the tumor microenvironment of muDX400-responsive tumors. Baseline and on-treatment genomic analysis showed an association between TMB, murine T-cell–inflamed gene expression profile (murine-GEP), and response to muDX400 treatment. We extended our analysis to investigate a canonical set of cancer and immune biology-related gene signatures, including signatures of angiogenesis, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, and stromal/epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition/TGFβ biology previously shown to be inversely associated with the clinical efficacy of immune checkpoint blockade. Finally, we evaluated the association between murine-GEP and preclinical efficacy with standard-of-care chemotherapy or antiangiogenic agents that previously demonstrated promising clinical activity, in combination with muDX400. Our profiling studies begin to elucidate the underlying biological mechanisms of response and resistance to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade represented by these models, thereby providing insight into which models are most appropriate for the evaluation of orthogonal combination strategies.

Details

ISSN :
15388514 and 15357163
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f195b533efd20f8c25094ce9564cd84c