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Distinct Immune Cell Populations Define Response to Anti-PD-1 Monotherapy and Anti-PD-1/Anti-CTLA-4 Combined Therapy

Authors :
Gide, TN
Quek, C
Menzies, AM
Tasker, AT
Shang, P
Holst, J
Madore, J
Lim, SY
Velickovic, R
Wongchenko, M
Yan, Y
Lo, S
Carlino, MS
Guminski, A
Saw, RPM
Pang, A
McGuire, HM
Palendira, U
Thompson, JF
Rizos, H
Silva, IPD
Batten, M
Scolyer, RA
Long, GV
Wilmott, JS
Gide, TN
Quek, C
Menzies, AM
Tasker, AT
Shang, P
Holst, J
Madore, J
Lim, SY
Velickovic, R
Wongchenko, M
Yan, Y
Lo, S
Carlino, MS
Guminski, A
Saw, RPM
Pang, A
McGuire, HM
Palendira, U
Thompson, JF
Rizos, H
Silva, IPD
Batten, M
Scolyer, RA
Long, GV
Wilmott, JS
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Cancer immunotherapies provide survival benefits in responding patients, but many patients fail to respond. Identifying the biology of treatment response and resistance are a priority to optimize drug selection and improve patient outcomes. We performed transcriptomic and immune profiling on 158 tumor biopsies from melanoma patients treated with anti-PD-1 monotherapy (n = 63) or combined anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 (n = 57). These data identified activated T cell signatures and T cell populations in responders to both treatments. Further mass cytometry analysis identified an EOMES+CD69+CD45RO+ effector memory T cell phenotype that was significantly more abundant in responders to combined immunotherapy compared with non-responders (n = 18). The gene expression profile of this population was associated with longer progression-free survival in patients treated with single agent and greater tumor shrinkage in both treatments.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1250303387
Document Type :
Electronic Resource