| Literature DB >> 32987799 |
Barbara Seliger1,2, Chiara Massa1, Bo Yang1, Daniel Bethmann3, Matthias Kappler4, Alexander Walter Eckert4,5, Claudia Wickenhauser3.
Abstract
Immunotherapy has been recently approved for the treatment of relapsed and metastatic human papilloma virus (HPV) positive and negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, the response of patients is limited and the overall survival remains short with a low rate of long-term survivors. There exists growing evidence that complex and partially redundant immune escape mechanisms play an important role for the low efficacy of immunotherapies in this disease. These are caused by diverse complex processes characterized by (i) changes in the expression of immune modulatory molecules in tumor cells, (ii) alterations in the frequency, composition and clonal expansion of immune cell subpopulations in the tumor microenvironment and peripheral blood leading to reduced innate and adaptive immune responses, (iii) impaired homing of immune cells to the tumor site as well as (iv) the presence of immune suppressive soluble and physical factors in the tumor microenvironment. We here summarize the major immune escape strategies of HNSCC lesions, highlight pathways, and molecular targets that help to attenuate HNSCC-induced immune tolerance, affect the selection and success of immunotherapeutic approaches to overcome resistance to immunotherapy by targeting immune escape mechanisms and thus improve the HNSCC patients' outcome.Entities:
Keywords: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; immune escape; immune responses; immunotherapy; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32987799 PMCID: PMC7582858 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21197032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Distinct clinical and immunological features of HPV− and HPV+ HNSCC.
| Clinical Parameter | HPV− | HPV+ |
|---|---|---|
| prevalence | 95% | 5% |
| risk factors | alcohol, tobacco | HPV |
| age | older | younger |
| localization | anywhere | mainly oropharynx |
| overall survival | worse | better |
| chemotherapy | - | better response |
| immunotherapy (iCPi) | response | increased response |
| tumor mutational burden | low | high |
|
| ||
| HLA-G | + | ++ |
| PD-L1 | + | ++ |
| HLA class I loss | ++ | ++ |
| immune cell infiltration | + | ++ |
| immune suppression | + | ++ |
+ moderate increase; ++ strong increase.
Immune escape mechanisms of solid tumors.
| Tumor | TME |
|---|---|
| MHC/HLA class I ↓ | frequency and function CD8+ T cells ↓ |
| APM ↓ | frequency and function CD4+ T cells ↓ |
| HLA-G/-E ↑ | frequency Treg ↑ |
| IFN pathway ↓ | frequency and function NK cells ↓ |
| PD-L1 ↑ | frequency MDSC ↑ |
| other checkpoint ligands ↑ | frequency TAM ↑ |
| adhesion molecules↓ | |
| apoptosis-inducing genes ↑ | |
| TGF-β, IL-10 ↑ | frequency CAF ↑ |
| metabolites ↑ | frequency and function monocytes ↓ |
| acidic pH | |
| Hypoxia |
↓ downregulated, ↑ upregulated.
Differences in the composition of the TME and its clinical relevance in HPV+ and HPV- HNSCC lesions.
| HPV− | HPV+ | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| immune cells/markers | frequency | clinical relevance | frequency | clinical relevance | [ |
| CD4/CD8 TILs | low | improve when present | high | good prognosis | [ |
| activation markers | low | bad | high | good prognosis | [ |
| Treg | low | high | ratio CD8/Treg | [ | |
| NK cells (CD56dim) | high | improved prognosis when present | high | improved prognosis | [ |
| B cells | low | n.a. | high | improved prognosis | [ |
| M1/M2 ratio | low | worse outcome | high | good | [ |
| MDSC | increased | increased metastasis | increased | increased metastasis | [ |
| PD1/PD-L1 | low | increased | increased metastasis | [ | |
Figure 1Different therapeutic options for the treatment of HNSCC.