| Literature DB >> 31331945 |
Sangeetha Palakurthi1, Mari Kuraguchi1, Sima J Zacharek1, Enrique Zudaire2, Raluca I Verona3, Wei Huang1, Dennis M Bonal4, Jeffrey Liu1, Abha Dhaneshwar1, Kristin DePeaux1, Martha R Gowaski1, Dyane Bailey1, Samuel N Regan1, Elena Ivanova1, Catherine Ferrante2, Jessie M English1, Aditya Khosla5, Andrew H Beck5, Julie A Rytlewski6, Catherine Sanders6, Sylvie Laquerre2, Mark A Bittinger1, Paul T Kirschmeier1, Kathryn Packman2, Pasi A Janne1,7, Christopher Moy2, Kwok-Kin Wong1,8, Matthew V Lorenzi3.
Abstract
The success of targeted or immune therapies is often hampered by the emergence of resistance and/or clinical benefit in only a subset of patients. We hypothesized that combining targeted therapy with immune modulation would show enhanced antitumor responses. Here, we explored the combination potential of erdafitinib, a fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitor under clinical development, with PD-1 blockade in an autochthonous FGFR2K660N/p53mut lung cancer mouse model. Erdafitinib monotherapy treatment resulted in substantial tumor control but no significant survival benefit. Although anti-PD-1 alone was ineffective, the erdafitinib and anti-PD-1 combination induced significant tumor regression and improved survival. For both erdafitinib monotherapy and combination treatments, tumor control was accompanied by tumor-intrinsic, FGFR pathway inhibition, increased T-cell infiltration, decreased regulatory T cells, and downregulation of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells. These effects were not observed in a KRASG12C-mutant genetically engineered mouse model, which is insensitive to FGFR inhibition, indicating that the immune changes mediated by erdafitinib may be initiated as a consequence of tumor cell killing. A decreased fraction of tumor-associated macrophages also occurred but only in combination-treated tumors. Treatment with erdafitinib decreased T-cell receptor (TCR) clonality, reflecting a broadening of the TCR repertoire induced by tumor cell death, whereas combination with anti-PD-1 led to increased TCR clonality, suggesting a more focused antitumor T-cell response. Our results showed that the combination of erdafitinib and anti-PD-1 drives expansion of T-cell clones and immunologic changes in the tumor microenvironment to support enhanced antitumor immunity and survival. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31331945 DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-18-0595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Res ISSN: 2326-6066 Impact factor: 11.151