4.8 Article

Enhanced Efficacy of Simultaneous PD-1 and PD-L1 Immune Checkpoint Blockade in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 81, Issue 1, Pages 158-173

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-20-1674

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. 2019 AACR-AstraZeneca Ovarian Cancer Research Fellowship [19-40-12-HILL]
  2. DOD OCRP Pilot Award [W81XWH19-1-0123, W81XWH-19-1-0147]
  3. Tina's Wish Rising Star grant
  4. NIH [K08 CA241093, DP5 OD029637, R01 CA234018]
  5. Eli Lilly and Company
  6. Advanced Medical Research Foundation
  7. Vincent Memorial Hospital Foundation
  8. China Scholarship Council [201908610120]

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This study demonstrates that the efficacy of immune therapies in high-grade serous ovarian cancer is driven by inducing state changes in NK cells and specific subsets of T cells. The results suggest that immune therapies, such as BRD1 inhibitors, capable of inducing such cellular state changes may have increased effectiveness in treating HGSC.
Immune therapies have had limited efficacy in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC), as the cellular targets and mechanism(s) of action of these agents in HGSC are unknown. Here we performed immune functional and single-cell RNA sequencing transcriptional profiling on novel HGSC organoid/immune cell co-cultures treated with a unique bispecific anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-Li) antibody compared with monospecific anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-Li controls. Comparing the functions of these agents across all immune cell types in real time identified key immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) targets that have eluded currently available monospecific therapies. The bispecific antibody induced superior cellular state changes in both T and natural killer (NK) cells. It uniquely induced NK cells to transition from inert to more active and cytotoxic phenotypes, implicating NK cells as a key missing component of the current ICB-induced immune response in HGSC. It also induced a subset of CD8 T cells to transition from naive to more active and cytotoxic progenitorexhausted phenotypes post-treatment, revealing the small, previously uncharacterized population of CD8 T cells responding to ICB in HGSC. These state changes were driven partially through bispecific antibody-induced downregulation of the bromodomaincontaining protein BRD1. Small-molecule inhibition of BRD1 induced similar state changes in vitro and demonstrated efficacy in vivo, validating the co-culture results. Our results demonstrate that state changes in both NK and a subset of T cells may be critical in inducing an effective anti-tumor immune response and suggest that immune therapies able to induce such cellular state changes, such as BRD1 inhibitors, may have increased efficacy in HGSC. Significance: This study indicates that increased efficacy of immune therapies in ovarian cancer is driven by state changes of NK and small subsets of CD8 T cells into active and cytotoxic states.

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