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Data from PD-1 Blockade in Solid Tumors with Defects in Polymerase Epsilon

Authors :
Aurelien Marabelle
Sylvie Chevret
Pierre Saintigny
Luis A. Diaz
Assia Lamrani-Ghaouti
Clotilde Simon
Frederic Legrand
Natalie Hoog-Labouret
Andrea Cercek
Neil H. Segal
Anthony Ferrari
Severine Tabone-Eglinger
Asha R. Krishnan
Guillem Argiles
Bill H. Diplas
Steven B. Maron
Michelle F. Lamendola-Essel
Dennis Stephens
Drew G. Gerber
Stephane Champiat
Jean-Charles Soria
Christophe Tournigand
Stephane Oudard
Farid El Hajbi
Diane Pannier
Thierry Andre
Olivier Bouche
Esma Saada-Bouzid
Sandrine Hiret
Frederic Rolland
Aude Flechon
Christelle de la Fouchardiere
Sophie Cousin
Muriel Duluc
Jean-Jacques Grob
Marielle Guillet
Amandine Bruyas
Rosine Guimbaud
Carlos Gomez-Roca
Damien Pouessel
Antoine Hollebecque
David Malka
Paule Augereau
Victor Simmet
Romain Cohen
Magali Svrcek
Julien Masliah-Planchon
Michael B. Foote
Valerie Attignon
Aurelien de Reynies
Lucas Michon
Nicolas Leulliot
Nadim Hamzaoui
Eric Pasmant
Ivan Bieche
Benoit Rousseau
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Missense mutations in the polymerase epsilon (POLE) gene have been reported to generate proofreading defects resulting in an ultramutated genome and to sensitize tumors to checkpoint blockade immunotherapy. However, many POLE-mutated tumors do not respond to such treatment. To better understand the link between POLE mutation variants and response to immunotherapy, we prospectively assessed the efficacy of nivolumab in a multicenter clinical trial in patients bearing advanced mismatch repair–proficient POLE-mutated solid tumors. We found that only tumors harboring selective POLE pathogenic mutations in the DNA binding or catalytic site of the exonuclease domain presented high mutational burden with a specific single-base substitution signature, high T-cell infiltrates, and a high response rate to anti–PD-1 monotherapy. This study illustrates how specific DNA repair defects sensitize to immunotherapy. POLE proofreading deficiency represents a novel agnostic biomarker for response to PD-1 checkpoint blockade therapy.Significance:POLE proofreading deficiency leads to high tumor mutational burden with high tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and predicts anti–PD-1 efficacy in mismatch repair–proficient tumors. Conversely, tumors harboring POLE mutations not affecting proofreading derived no benefit from PD-1 blockade. POLE proofreading deficiency is a new tissue-agnostic biomarker for cancer immunotherapy.See related video: https://vimeo.com/720727355This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1397

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09a36140e69ccd60ecf121a937d16ebe