For many individuals with different types of cancer, immune checkpoint inhibitors can effectively boost their immune system to fight their disease, but not all patients benefit from these medications.
Now a team led by investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Harvard Medical School (HMS) has developed an approach to help identify potential clinical markers that may indicate which patients will respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors and which should be treated with other strategies.
The findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
For the study, the scientists developed an approach whereby they implanted breast cancer tumours into mice and then treated the animals with immune checkpoint inhibitors. "We first developed a resection and response bilateral tumour model in which we put one breast tumour in each side of the mouse breast.
We then remove one tumour to evaluate the tumour microenvironment and we monitor the response of the other, non-resected, tumour to immune checkpoint blockade, identifying the mouse as a responder or a non-responder," explained lead author Ivy X. Chen, PhD, a former postdoctoral fellow at MGH's E.L. Steele Laboratories for tumour Biology.
Using this model system, the researchers found that the responding tumours contained higher numbers of cancer-killing "cytotoxic" T immune cells and fewer numbers of certain immune suppressor cells early after the start of treatment.
Gene expression analyses of the cytotoxic T cells within the tumours revealed distinct gene signatures distinguishing responders from non-responders--specifically, the presence of T cell activation signals in responding tumours and T cell exhaustion signals in non-responding tumours.
"Importantly, we found that these gene signatures for responder and non-responder tumours significantly correlated with responder and non-responder gene signatures derived from patients with melanoma who were treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors, as well as with overall survival in a group of patients with breast cancer," said co-senior author Meromit Singer, PhD, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Data Science at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Department of Immunology at Harvard Medical School.
The impact of this study may go beyond the identification of novel markers to predict patient response to immune checkpoint inhibitors.
"Our study highlights the importance of investigating the dynamic immune modulation of the tumour microenvironment to understand the potential benefit of immunotherapy," said co-senior author Rakesh Jain, PhD, director of the Steele Laboratories at MGH and the A.W. Cook Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School. "We hope to extend our approach to study and discover resistance mechanisms and biomarkers of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in other tumour types."
Source: Massachusetts General Hospital
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