| Literature DB >> 33344227 |
Dante J Merlino1, Jennifer M Johnson2, Madalina Tuluc3, Stacey Gargano3, Robert Stapp3, Larry Harshyne2, Benjamin E Leiby4, Adam Flanders5, Ralph Zinner2, Rita Axelrod2, Joseph Curry1, David M Cognetti1, Kyle Mannion6, Young J Kim6, Ulrich Rodeck7, Athanassios Argiris2, Adam J Luginbuhl1.
Abstract
PD-1 blockade represents a promising treatment in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). We analyzed results of a neoadjuvant randomized window-of-opportunity trial of nivolumab plus/minus tadalafil to investigate whether immunotherapy-mediated treatment effects vary by site of involvement (primary tumor, lymph nodes) and determine how radiographic tumor shrinkage correlates with pathologic treatment effect. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Forty-four patients enrolled in trial NCT03238365 were treated with nivolumab 240 mg intravenously on days 1 and 15 with or without oral tadalafil, as determined by random assignment, followed by surgery on day 31. Radiographic volumetric response (RVR) was defined as percent change in tumor volume from pretreatment to posttreatment CT scan. Responders were defined as those with a 10% reduction in the volume of the primary tumor or lymph nodes (LN). Pathologic treatment effect (PTE) was defined as the area showing fibrosis or lymphohistiocytic inflammation divided by total tumor area.Entities:
Keywords: computed tomography imaging; immunotherapy; lymph nodes; nivolumab; squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck
Year: 2020 PMID: 33344227 PMCID: PMC7738605 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.566315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 157 y/o M with P16+, cT2N2 oropharyngeal SCC. (A) CT imaging was performed on day 0 (pretreatment) and day 31 (posttreatment) to determine radiographic treatment effect; representative coronal imaging demonstrates the primary tumor (box), lymph node A (short arrow), and lymph node B (long arrow). (B) Low magnification (left) and high magnification (right) imaging demonstrates a tumor with partial (52%) pathologic treatment effect. In the high magnification image, a nest of viable tumor cells (dashed line) is bordered by lymphocytic infiltration (short arrow), macrophages (long arrow), and fibrosis (arrowhead). (C) Lymph node A demonstrated 100% pathologic TE, with no tumor cells evident in the node. High-powered magnification (right) reveals a poorly-formed granuloma (arrow) and extensive fibrosis (arrowhead), leading to distortion of the normal LN architecture. A residual germinal center is also present (dashed lines). (D) Lymph node B exhibited 0% pathologic TE, as seen in the high-magnification image (right). The normal lymph node architecture is preserved (long arrow), and a nest of malignant cells confirms tumor invasion (short arrow).
Figure 4Correlation of radiographic volumetric response and pathologic treatment effect. (A) Assignment of patients to radiographic volumetric response groups, based on the percent change in volume of both the primary tumor and the combined volume of all abnormal lymph nodes. (B) All 8 patients with T4 primary tumors (red outlines) were characterized as radiographic non-responders. 18 patients with T1–T3 primary sites were designated radiographic non-responders (solid red); 89% (16/18) exhibited no pathologic treatment effect (n = 7) or minimal PTE (n = 9). Of the 17 patients designated radiographic responders (blue), 15 (88%) demonstrated moderate (n = 12) or complete (n = 3) treatment effect. (C) Quantitative analysis of primary sites demonstrates a strong positive correlation between RVR and pathologic TE (slope = 0.55, p < 0.001) of individual tumors, despite the failure of T4 primary tumors (red outlined circles) to demonstrate any RVR. (D) Analysis of abnormal nodes demonstrates a significant correlation (slope = 0.65, p < 0.05). For (D), each data point represents a single node.
Figure 2Analysis of individual patients reveals frequent discordance between pathologic TE and primary site and lymph nodes. (A) Of the 44 patients analyzed, 32 had lymph nodes positive in addition to primary site; 16 of the 32 (50%) patients exhibited discordant PTE. (B) Discordant TE is driven primarily by an increased PTE at LN relative to primary site. Of the 40 nodes analyzed, only 5 (12.5%) (red lines) had higher PTE than their primary site; conversely, 14 (35%) (green lines) nodes had higher PTE than their matched primary site. Nodes with concordant PTE at primary site are depicted in black.
Figure 3Comparison of the tumor microenvironment in matched lymph nodes of four patients with highly discordant PTE. (A) List of matched lymph node PTE. (B) PD-L1 expression did not appear to influence PTE between discordant LNs. (C) Histologic analysis of tumor-infiltrating immune cells demonstrated a trend toward increased CD8 T cells and (D) increased CD163+ macrophages in LN with maximal PTE; (E) no detectable trend was detected in tumor-infiltrating FoxP3+ Tregs. (F) No detectable relationship was found between stromal CD8 T cells and PTE, but (G) stromal CD163+ macrophages were increased in LN with maximal TE. (H) 75% of the max TE LN contained no stromal FoxP3+ Tregs, in sharp contrast to their matched min TE LN.