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A single dose of neoadjuvant PD-1 blockade predicts clinical outcomes in resectable melanoma

Authors :
Huang, Alexander C.
Orlowski, Robert J.
Xu, Xiaowei
Mick, Rosemarie
George, Sangeeth M.
Yan, Patrick K.
Manne, Sasikanth
Kraya, Adam A.
Wubbenhorst, Bradley
Dorfman, Liza
D’Andrea, Kurt
Wenz, Brandon M.
Liu, Shujing
Chilukuri, Lakshmi
Kozlov, Andrew
Carberry, Mary
Giles, Lydia
Kier, Melanie W.
Quagliarello, Felix
McGettigan, Suzanne
Kreider, Kristin
Annamalai, Lakshmanan
Zhao, Qing
Mogg, Robin
Xu, Wei
Blumenschein, Wendy M.
Yearley, Jennifer H.
Linette, Gerald P.
Amaravadi, Ravi K.
Schuchter, Lynn M.
Herati, Ramin S.
Bengsch, Bertram
Nathanson, Katherine L.
Farwell, Michael D.
Karakousis, Giorgos C.
Wherry, E. John
Mitchell, Tara C.
Source :
Nature Medicine; March 2019, Vol. 25 Issue: 3 p454-461, 8p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Immunologic responses to anti-PD-1 therapy in melanoma patients occur rapidly with pharmacodynamic T cell responses detectable in blood by 3 weeks. It is unclear, however, whether these early blood-based observations translate to the tumor microenvironment. We conducted a study of neoadjuvant/adjuvant anti-PD-1 therapy in stage III/IV melanoma. We hypothesized that immune reinvigoration in the tumor would be detectable at 3 weeks and that this response would correlate with disease-free survival. We identified a rapid and potent anti-tumor response, with 8 of 27 patients experiencing a complete or major pathological response after a single dose of anti-PD-1, all of whom remain disease free. These rapid pathologic and clinical responses were associated with accumulation of exhausted CD8 T cells in the tumor at 3 weeks, with reinvigoration in the blood observed as early as 1 week. Transcriptional analysis demonstrated a pretreatment immune signature (neoadjuvant response signature) that was associated with clinical benefit. In contrast, patients with disease recurrence displayed mechanisms of resistance including immune suppression, mutational escape, and/or tumor evolution. Neoadjuvant anti-PD-1 treatment is effective in high-risk resectable stage III/IV melanoma. Pathological response and immunological analyses after a single neoadjuvant dose can be used to predict clinical outcome and to dissect underlying mechanisms in checkpoint blockade.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956 and 1546170X
Volume :
25
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs48676206
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-019-0357-y