| Literature DB >> 34194441 |
Binghan Zhou1, Yuan Gao1, Peng Zhang1, Qian Chu1.
Abstract
The immune checkpoint blockade therapy has completely transformed cancer treatment modalities because of its unprecedented and durable clinical responses in various cancers. With the increasing use of immune checkpoint blockades in clinical practice, a large number of patients develop acquired resistance. However, the knowledge about acquired resistance to immune checkpoint blockades is limited and poorly summarized. In this review, we clarify the principal elements of acquired resistance to immune checkpoint blockades. The definition of acquired resistance is heterogeneous among groups or societies, but the expert consensus of The Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer can be referred. Oligo-progression is the main pattern of acquired resistance. Acquired resistance can be derived from the selection of resistant cancer cell clones that exist in the tumor mass before therapeutic intervention or gradual acquisition in the sensitive cancer cells. Specifically, tumor intrinsic mechanisms include neoantigen depletion, defects in antigen presentation machinery, aberrations of interferon signaling, tumor-induced exclusion/immunosuppression, and tumor cell plasticity. Tumor extrinsic mechanisms include upregulation of other immune checkpoints. Presently, a set of treatment modalities is applied to patients with similar clinical characteristics or resistance mechanisms for overcoming acquired resistance, and hence, further research is required.Entities:
Keywords: acquired resistance; immune checkpoint blockade therapy; immunosuppression; interferon signaling aberration; neoantigen depletion; treatment modalities.; tumor cell plasticity; tumor-induced exclusion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34194441 PMCID: PMC8236848 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.693609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
The definitions for PD-(L)1 inhibitor monotherapy resistance in solid tumors .
| Definitions of neoadjuvant therapy resistance | ||
|---|---|---|
| Major pathological response | Other requirements | |
| Primary resistance | No | Follow primary resistance definitions |
| Acquired resistance | Yes | Follow acquired resistance definitions |
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| Timing of last dose prior to PD | Confirmatory biopsy | |
| Primary resistance/early relapse | <12 weeks | Yes |
| Late relapse | ≥12 Weeks | Yes |
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| Drug exposure and best response | Confirmatory scan | |
| Primary resistance | ≥6 weeks; PD, SD for <6 months | Yes, at least 4 weeks after progression |
| Acquired resistance | ≥6 months; CR, PR, SD for >6 months | Yes, at least 4 weeks after progression |
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| Best response and duration of time after last dose of PD-(L)1 inhibitor | Confirmatory scan | |
| Primary resistance | No CR/PR prior to discontinuation | No |
| Acquired resistance | Prior CR/PR and ≤12 weeks from last dose | Yes |
| Late progression | Prior CR/PR and >12 weeks from last dose | Yes |
Adapted from SITC expert consensus for PD-(L)1 inhibitor monotherapy resistance in solid tumors (15).
Tumor shrinkage ≥90%.
In this setting, a confirmatory biopsy would supplant a confirmatory scan.
Indolent tumor types might require modification of the timeframe.
Other than when tumor growth is very rapid and patients are deteriorating clinically.
The reason for treatment discontinuation may be CR, PR, end of study, or other social rationales.
CR, complete response; PD, progressive disease; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease. Per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors 1.1.
Clinical characteristics of acquired resistance to ICBs.
| Study | Cancer type | No. of patients | Treatment | Prior response | Median time to resistance | Pattern of progression | Median post-progression survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al. ( | Melanoma | 36 | Anti-PD-1 monotherapy, any line | 11% CR, 89% PR | 11.1m | 78% single site | 12.8m |
| Pires da Silva et al. ( | Melanoma | 12 | Anti-PD-1 plus anti-CTLA-4, first line | 50% PR, 33% SD, 17%, pseudo-progression | 9.6m | Median of 5 progressing lesions | Not reach, One-year survival rate is 83% |
| Keynote 006* ( | Melanoma | 27 | Anti-PD-1 monotherapy, anti-CTLA-4 monotherapy, first or second line | 22% CR, 59% PR, 19% SD | 33.3m | 60% single site, 20% double sites | NA |
| Gettinger et al. ( | NSCLC | 26 | Anti-PD-(L)1, anti–PD(L)1 plus anti-CTLA4, anti–PD-1 plus erlotinib, any line | 100% PR | 10.4m | 54% single site, 35% double sites | Not reach, three-year survival rate is 70% |
| Shah et al. ( | NSCLC | 33 | Anti-PD-1 monotherapy, any line | NA | NA | 67% single site | NA |
*26 patients completed two-year treatment of pembrolizumab, and 1 patient did not complete two-year treatment of pembrolizumab for achieving complete response. The time to resistance was calculated from the end of pembrolizumab treatment. The pattern of progression of two patients were not available, so they are excluded to calculate the rate of oligo-progression. NA, not available.
Figure 1Two modes of acquired resistance to immunotherapy. In the Darwinian natural selection mode, immunotherapy resistant tumor cell clones pre-exist in the tumor mass. They are present at the treatment initiation phase and resist the immune response. In the homeostatic resistance mode, resistant clones are not present before the treatment initiation but emerge under the additional immune pressure it generates. Brown, yellow, and green cells denote different resistant tumor cell clones and blue cells denote sensitive tumor cell clones.
Figure 2Tumor intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms of acquired resistance to immunotherapy. (A) The left panel illustrates tumor intrinsic mechanisms of acquired resistance, including neoantigen depletion, defects in antigen presentation machinery, interferon signaling deficiency or prolonged exposure, tumor-induced exclusion/immunosuppression, and tumor cell plasticity. (B) The right panel illustrates tumor extrinsic mechanisms of acquired resistance, mainly through upregulating other immune checkpoints, such as TIM-3, LAG-3, and VISTA.
The potential strategies to overcome acquired resistance.
| Clinical characteristics or resistance mechanisms | Potential strategies |
|---|---|
| Oligo-progression | Continuous ICB plus local therapy ( |
| Neoantigen depletion | Oncolytic virotherapy such as T-VEC ( |
| Continuous ICB plus vaccine ( | |
| Continuous ICB plus superantigens ( | |
| Defects in antigen presentation machinery | NK cell-based therapy ( |
| Continuous ICB plus RIG-I activation ( | |
| Continuous ICB plus overexpression of NLRC5 or intratumoral delivery of BO-112 ( | |
| Aberrations of interferon signaling | T cell–based adoptive cell therapy ( |
| Tumor-induced exclusion/immunosuppression | Continuous ICB plus inhibition of the involved pathways, including Wnt/β-catenin, PI3K-Akt, IFN-β/NOS2, CSF-1, TGF-β, adenosine, and IDO |
| Continuous ICB plus microenvironment-targeting strategies ( | |
| Tumor cell plasticity | Continuous ICB plus epigenetic modulation ( |
| Continuous ICB plus MRD-targeting strategies ( | |
| Continuous ICB plus EMT inhibition | |
| Continuous ICB plus ferroptosis induction ( | |
| Continuous ICB plus other plasticity-targeting strategies ( | |
| Other immune checkpoints upregulation | Continuous ICB plus inhibition of the upregulating checkpoints |
| Other strategies | Continuous ICB plus chemotherapy, anti-angiogenesis therapy, radiotherapy, target therapy, or another immune checkpoint inhibitor |
| Stop using ICB and to use later-line chemotherapy |