4.7 Article

Intratumoral Adaptive Immunosuppression and Type 17 Immunity in Mismatch Repair Proficient Colorectal Tumors

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 17, Pages 5250-5259

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-0114

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Bloombergsimilar toKimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
  2. Bloomberg Philanthropies
  3. NIH [P30 DK089502, P30 CA006973, R01 CA203891, R01 CA142779]
  4. Swim Across America foundation
  5. Mark Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Commonwealth Foundation
  7. Cancer Research Institute/FightColorectalCancer I/O grant
  8. NIH Gastrointestinal Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant [P50 CA062924]
  9. Merck
  10. Bristol Myers Squibb
  11. Stand Up to Cancer Immunology Dream Team Translational Research Grant [SU2C-AACR-DT1012]
  12. Colorectal Cancer Dream Team Translational Research Grant [SU2C-AACR-DT22-17]
  13. [T32 CA193145]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose: Approximately 10% of patients with mismatch repair-proficient (MMRp) colorectal cancer showed clinical benefit to anti-PD-1 monotherapy (NCT01876511). We sought to identify biomarkers that delineate patients with immunoreactive colorectal cancer and to explore new combinatorial immunotherapy strategies that can impact MMRp colorectal cancer. Experimental Design: We compared the expression of 44 selected immune-related genes in the primary colon tumor of 19 patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) who responded (n = 13) versus those who did not (n = 6) to anti-PD-1 therapy (NCT01876511). We define a 10 gene-based immune signature that could distinguish responder from nonresponder. Resected colon specimens (n = 14) were used to validate the association of the predicted status (responder and nonresponder) with the immune-related gene expression, the phenotype, and the function of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes freshly isolated from the same tumors. Results: Although both IL17(Low) and IL17(High) immuno-reactive MMRp colorectal cancers are associated with intratumor correlates of adaptive immunosuppression (CD8/IFN gamma and PD-L1/IDO1 colocalization), only IL17(Low) MMRp tumors (3/14) have a tumor immune microenvironment (TiME) that resembles the TiME in primary colon tumors of patients with mCRC responsive to anti-PD-1 treatment. Conclusions: The detection of a preexisting antitumor immune response in MMRp colorectal cancer (immunoreactive MMRp colorectal cancer) is not sufficient to predict a clinical benefit to T-cell checkpoint inhibitors. Intratumoral IL17-mediated signaling may preclude responses to immunotherapy. Drugs targeting the IL17 signaling pathway are available in clinic, and their combination with T-cell checkpoint inhibitors could improve colorectal cancer immunotherapy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available