Self-Renewing CD8+ T-Cell Abundance in Blood Associates with Response to Immunotherapy.
Rohan ManiarPeter H WangRobert S WashburnRadomir KratchmarovShana M ColeyAnjali SaqiSamuel S PanJianhua HuCatherine A ShuNaiyer A RizviBrian S HenickSteven L ReinerPublished in: Cancer immunology research (2022)
Treatment with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) often fails to elicit durable antitumor immunity. Recent studies suggest that ICB does not restore potency to terminally dysfunctional T cells, but instead drives proliferation and differentiation of self-renewing progenitor T cells into fresh, effector-like T cells. Antitumor immunity catalyzed by ICB is characterized by mobilization of antitumor T cells in systemic circulation and tumor. To address whether abundance of self-renewing T cells in blood is associated with immunotherapy response, we used flow cytometry of peripheral blood from a cohort of patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with ICB. At baseline, expression of T-cell factor 1 (TCF1), a marker of self-renewing T cells, was detected at higher frequency in effector-memory (CCR7-) CD8+ T cells from patients who experienced durable clinical benefit compared to those with primary resistance to ICB. On-treatment blood samples from patients benefiting from ICB also exhibited a greater frequency of TCF1+CCR7-CD8+ T cells and higher proportions of TCF1 expression in treatment-expanded PD-1+CCR7-CD8+ T cells. The observed correlation of TCF1 frequency in CCR7-CD8+ T cells and response to ICB suggests that broader examination of self-renewing T-cell abundance in blood will determine its potential as a non-invasive, predictive biomarker of response and resistance to immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- regulatory t cells
- peripheral blood
- flow cytometry
- poor prognosis
- small cell lung cancer
- newly diagnosed
- antibiotic resistance genes
- chronic kidney disease
- long non coding rna
- immune response
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- case control
- working memory
- smoking cessation
- type iii
- brain metastases