Login / Signup

Hyperpolarized 13 C-Pyruvate to Assess Response to Anti-PD1 Immune Checkpoint Inhibition in YUMMER 1.7 Melanoma Xenografts.

Chantale FarahMarie-Aline NeveuCaroline BouzinZorica KnezevicBernard GallezEleonora LeucciJean-François BaurainLionel MignionBénédicte F Jordan
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
There is currently no consensus to determine which advanced melanoma patients will benefit from immunotherapy, highlighting the critical need to identify early-response biomarkers to immune checkpoint inhibitors. The aim of this work was to evaluate in vivo metabolic spectroscopy using hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C-pyruvate and 13 C-glucose to assess early response to anti-PD1 therapy in the YUMMER1.7 syngeneic melanoma model. The xenografts showed a significant tumor growth delay when treated with two cycles of an anti-PD1 antibody compared to an isotype control antibody. 13 C-MRS was performed in vivo after the injection of hyperpolarized 13 C-pyruvate, at baseline and after one cycle of immunotherapy, to evaluate early dynamic changes in 13 C-pyruvate- 13 C-lactate exchange. Furthermore, ex vivo 13 C-MRS metabolic tracing experiments were performed after U- 13 C-glucose injection following one cycle of immunotherapy. A significant decrease in the ratio of HP 13 C-lactate to 13 C-pyruvate was observed in vivo in comparison with the isotype control group, while there was a lack of change in the levels of 13 C lactate and 13 C alanine issued from 13 C glucose infusion, following ex vivo assessment on resected tumors. Thus, these results suggest that hyperpolarized 13 C-pyruvate could be used to assess early response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in melanoma patients.
Keyphrases