4.6 Review

Antigen presentation in cancer - mechanisms and clinical implications for immunotherapy

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NATURE REVIEWS CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
卷 20, 期 9, 页码 604-623

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41571-023-00789-4

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Immune-checkpoint inhibitors and other immunotherapies have revolutionized cancer treatment, but most patients do not derive durable benefit, indicating a need for biomarkers. This review explores the role of antigen presentation and molecular/genomic alterations affecting it in response to these therapies. Understanding the mechanisms of clinical response and resistance is essential for maximizing the clinical benefits of immunotherapies.
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and other immunotherapies have revolutionized the treatment of patients with cancer. Nonetheless, most patients do not derive durable benefit, indicating a need for biomarkers to guide treatment selection. In this Review, the authors describe the role of antigen presentation in response to ICIs and other immunotherapies, with a focus on the role of molecular and/or genomic alterations affecting antigen presentation. Over the past decade, the emergence of effective immunotherapies has revolutionized the clinical management of many types of cancers. However, long-term durable tumour control is only achieved in a fraction of patients who receive these therapies. Understanding the mechanisms underlying clinical response and resistance to treatment is therefore essential to expanding the level of clinical benefit obtained from immunotherapies. In this Review, we describe the molecular mechanisms of antigen processing and presentation in tumours and their clinical consequences. We examine how various aspects of the antigen-presentation machinery (APM) shape tumour immunity. In particular, we discuss genomic variants in HLA alleles and other APM components, highlighting their influence on the immunopeptidomes of both malignant cells and immune cells. Understanding the APM, how it is regulated and how it changes in tumour cells is crucial for determining which patients will respond to immunotherapy and why some patients develop resistance. We focus on recently discovered molecular and genomic alterations that drive the clinical outcomes of patients receiving immune-checkpoint inhibitors. An improved understanding of how these variables mediate tumour-immune interactions is expected to guide the more precise administration of immunotherapies and reveal potentially promising directions for the development of new immunotherapeutic approaches.

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