4.7 Article

Combination immunotherapy induces distinct T-cell repertoire responses when administered to patients with different malignancies

期刊

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2019-000368

关键词

oncology; immunology; medicine

资金

  1. Peter Michael Foundation
  2. NIH [4T32 CA177555, 1K08 AI139375, R01CA223484, U01CA233100]
  3. Conquer Cancer Foundation of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
  4. Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network Palm Beach New Discoveries Young Investigator Award
  5. Prostate Cancer Foundation Young Investigator Award
  6. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  7. UCSF Academic Senate Committee on Research
  8. San Francisco State University Development of Research and Creativity Grant

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background CTLA-4 blockade with ipilimumab is Food and Drug Administration-approved for melanoma as a monotherapy and has been shown to modulate the circulating T-cell repertoire. We have previously reported clinical trials combining CTLA-4 blockade with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in metastatic melanoma patients and in metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients. Here, we investigate the effect that cancer type has on circulating T cells in metastatic melanoma and mCRPC patients, treated with ipilimumab and GM-CSF. Methods We used next-generation sequencing of T-cell receptors (TCR) to compare the circulating T cells of melanoma and mCRPC patients receiving the same treatment with ipilimumab and GM-CSF by Wilcoxon rank sum test. Flow cytometry was utilized to investigate specific T-cell populations. TCR sequencing results were correlated with each T-cell subpopulation by Spearman's rank correlation coefficient. Of note, 14 metastatic melanoma patients had samples available for TCR sequencing and 21 had samples available for flow cytometry analysis; 37 mCRPC patients had samples available for sequencing of whom 22 have TCR data available at both timepoints; 20 of these patients had samples available for flow cytometry analysis and 16 had data available at both timepoints. Results While melanoma and mCRPC patients had similar pretreatment circulating T-cell counts, treatment induces greater expansion of circulating T cells in melanoma patients. Metastatic melanoma patients have a higher proportion of clones that increased more than fourfold after the treatment compared with mCRPC patients (18.9% vs 11.0%, p=0.017). Additionally, melanoma patients compared with mCRPC patients had a higher ratio of convergent frequency (1.22 vs 0.60, p=0.012). Decreases in clonality induced by treatment are associated with baseline CD8+ T-cell counts in both patient groups, but are more pronounced in the melanoma patients (r=-0.81, p<0.001 vs r=-0.59, p=0.02).

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