4.7 Article

CTLA4 promoter methylation predicts response and progression-free survival in stage IV melanoma treated with anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy (ipilimumab)

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 70, Issue 6, Pages 1781-1788

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-020-02777-4

Keywords

CTLA-4; CTLA4; DNA methylation; Immunotherapy; Predictive biomarker; Melanoma

Funding

  1. University Hospital Bonn BONFOR program [O-105.0069]
  2. DFG Cluster of Excellence ImmunoSensation [EXC 1023]
  3. Qiagen
  4. Projekt DEAL

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CTLA4 methylation is a predictive biomarker for response to anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy, significantly associated with progressive tumors and progression-free survival.
Anti-CTLA-4-antibodies can induce long-lasting tumor remissions. However, only a few patients respond, necessitating the development of predictive companion biomarkers. Increasing evidence suggests a major role of epigenetics, including DNA methylation, in immunology and resistance to immune checkpoint blockade. Here, we tested CTLA4 promoter methylation and CTLA-4 protein expression as predictive biomarkers for response to anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy. We identified retrospectively N = 30 stage IV melanoma patients treated with single-agent anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy (ipilimumab). We used quantitative methylation-specific PCR and immunohistochemistry to quantify CTLA4 methylation and protein expression in pre-treatment samples. CTLA4 methylation was significantly higher in progressive as compared to responding tumors and significantly associated with progression-free survival. A subset of infiltrating lymphocytes and tumor cells highly expressed CTLA-4. However, CTLA-4 protein expression did not predict response to treatment. We conclude that CTLA4 methylation is a predictive biomarker for response to anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy.

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