Literature DB >> 30777877

Prevalence and Cellular Distribution of Novel Immune Checkpoint Targets Across Longitudinal Specimens in Treatment-naïve Melanoma Patients: Implications for Clinical Trials.

Umaimainthan Palendira1,2,3, James S Wilmott4,1,3, Georgina V Long4,1,3,5,6, Richard A Scolyer7,1,3,8, Jarem Edwards4,1,2,3, Annie Tasker4,3, Inês Pires da Silva4, Camelia Quek4,1,3, Marcel Batten4,3, Angela Ferguson1,2,3, Ruth Allen2, Benjamin Allanson4,8, Robyn P M Saw4,1,8,5, John F Thompson4,1,8,5, Alexander M Menzies4,1,5,6.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Immunotherapies targeting costimulating and coinhibitory checkpoint receptors beyond PD-1 and CTLA-4 have entered clinical trials. Little is known about the relative abundance, coexpression, and immune cells enriched for each specific drug target, limiting understanding of the biological basis of potential treatment outcomes and development of predictive biomarkers for personalized immunotherapy. We sought to assess the abundance of checkpoint receptors during melanoma disease progression and identify immune cells enriched for them.Experimental Design: Multiplex immunofluorescence staining for immune checkpoint receptors (ICOS, GITR, OX40, PD-1, TIM-3, VISTA) was performed on 96 melanoma biopsies from 41 treatment-naïve patients, including patient-matched primary tumors, nodal metastases, and distant metastases. Mass cytometry was conducted on tumor dissociates from 18 treatment-naïve melanoma metastases to explore immune subsets enriched for checkpoint receptors.
RESULTS: A small subset of tumor-infiltrating leukocytes expressed checkpoint receptors at any stage of melanoma disease. GITR and OX40 were the least abundant checkpoint receptors, with <1% of intratumoral T cells expressing either marker. ICOS, PD-1, TIM-3, and VISTA were most abundant, with TIM-3 and VISTA mostly expressed on non-T cells, and TIM-3 enriched on dendritic cells. Tumor-resident T cells (CD69+/CD103+/CD8+) were enriched for TIGIT (>70%) and other coinhibitory but not costimulatory receptors. The proportion of GITR+ T cells decreased from primary melanoma (>5%) to lymph node (<1%, P = 0.04) and distant metastases (<1%, P = 0.0005).
CONCLUSIONS: This study provides the first comprehensive assessment of immune checkpoint receptor expression in any cancer and provides important data for rational selection of targets for trials and predictive biomarker development. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30777877     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-4011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  7 in total

1.  Evolution of delayed resistance to immunotherapy in a melanoma responder.

Authors:  David Liu; Jia-Ren Lin; Emily J Robitschek; Gyulnara G Kasumova; Alex Heyde; Alvin Shi; Adam Kraya; Gao Zhang; Tabea Moll; Dennie T Frederick; Yu-An Chen; Shu Wang; Denis Schapiro; Li-Lun Ho; Kevin Bi; Avinash Sahu; Shaolin Mei; Benchun Miao; Tatyana Sharova; Christopher Alvarez-Breckenridge; Jackson H Stocking; Tommy Kim; Riley Fadden; Donald Lawrence; Mai P Hoang; Daniel P Cahill; Mohsen Malehmir; Martin A Nowak; Priscilla K Brastianos; Christine G Lian; Eytan Ruppin; Benjamin Izar; Meenhard Herlyn; Eliezer M Van Allen; Katherine Nathanson; Keith T Flaherty; Ryan J Sullivan; Manolis Kellis; Peter K Sorger; Genevieve M Boland
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2021-05-03       Impact factor: 53.440

2.  Higher proportions of CD39+ tumor-resident cytotoxic T cells predict recurrence-free survival in patients with stage III melanoma treated with adjuvant immunotherapy.

Authors:  Richard A Scolyer; Georgina V Long; James S Wilmott; Grace Heloise Attrill; Carina N Owen; Tasnia Ahmed; Ismael A Vergara; Andrew J Colebatch; Jordan W Conway; Kazi J Nahar; John F Thompson; Ines Pires da Silva; Matteo S Carlino; Alexander M Menzies; Serigne Lo; Umaimainthan Palendira
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2022-06       Impact factor: 12.469

3.  Enumeration And Characterization Of Circulating Tumor Cells And Its Application In Advanced Gastric Cancer.

Authors:  Boran Cheng; Gangling Tong; Xuan Wu; Wenwu Cai; Zhu Li; Zhongyi Tong; Lirui He; Shaokang Yu; Shubin Wang
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2019-09-25       Impact factor: 4.147

4.  Analyzing Prognostic Hub Genes in the Microenvironment of Cutaneous Melanoma by Computer Integrated Bioinformatics.

Authors:  Guangyao Li; Jingye Zhang; Yourao Liu; Xiqing Cheng; Kai Sun; Wenjuan Hong; Ke Sha
Journal:  Comput Intell Neurosci       Date:  2022-03-08

5.  Unveiling the tumor immune microenvironment of organ-specific melanoma metastatic sites.

Authors:  Georgina V Long; Richard A Scolyer; Ines Pires da Silva; Jordan W Conway; Robert V Rawson; Serigne Lo; Tasnia Ahmed; Ismael A Vergara; Tuba N Gide; Grace Heloise Attrill; Matteo S Carlino; Robyn P M Saw; John F Thompson; Andrew J Spillane; Kerwin F Shannon; Brindha Shivalingam; Alexander Maxwell Menzies; James S Wilmott
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2022-09       Impact factor: 12.469

Review 6.  Molecular imaging to support cancer immunotherapy.

Authors:  Pim P van de Donk; Sjoukje F Oosting; Daan G Knapen; Anthonie J van der Wekken; Adrienne H Brouwers; Marjolijn N Lub-de Hooge; Derk-Jan A de Groot; Elisabeth Ge de Vries
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2022-08       Impact factor: 12.469

7.  NEDD4 Negatively Regulates GITR via Ubiquitination in Immune Microenvironment of Melanoma.

Authors:  Yu Guo; Lichang Yang; Shaorong Lei; Wuyuan Tan; Jianhong Long
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2019-12-04       Impact factor: 4.147

  7 in total

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