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Data from The Combined Effect of FGFR Inhibition and PD-1 Blockade Promotes Tumor-Intrinsic Induction of Antitumor Immunity

Authors :
Matthew V. Lorenzi
Raluca I. Verona
Kwok-Kin Wong
Christopher Moy
Pasi A. Janne
Kathryn Packman
Paul T. Kirschmeier
Mark A. Bittinger
Sylvie Laquerre
Catherine Sanders
Julie A. Rytlewski
Andrew H. Beck
Aditya Khosla
Jessie M. English
Catherine Ferrante
Elena Ivanova
Samuel N. Regan
Dyane Bailey
Martha R. Gowaski
Kristin DePeaux
Abha Dhaneshwar
Jeffrey Liu
Dennis M. Bonal
Wei Huang
Enrique Zudaire
Sima J. Zacharek
Mari Kuraguchi
Sangeetha Palakurthi
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

The success of targeted or immune therapies is often hampered by the emergence of resistance and/or clinical benefit in only a subset of patients. We hypothesized that combining targeted therapy with immune modulation would show enhanced antitumor responses. Here, we explored the combination potential of erdafitinib, a fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitor under clinical development, with PD-1 blockade in an autochthonous FGFR2K660N/p53mut lung cancer mouse model. Erdafitinib monotherapy treatment resulted in substantial tumor control but no significant survival benefit. Although anti–PD-1 alone was ineffective, the erdafitinib and anti–PD-1 combination induced significant tumor regression and improved survival. For both erdafitinib monotherapy and combination treatments, tumor control was accompanied by tumor-intrinsic, FGFR pathway inhibition, increased T-cell infiltration, decreased regulatory T cells, and downregulation of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells. These effects were not observed in a KRASG12C-mutant genetically engineered mouse model, which is insensitive to FGFR inhibition, indicating that the immune changes mediated by erdafitinib may be initiated as a consequence of tumor cell killing. A decreased fraction of tumor-associated macrophages also occurred but only in combination-treated tumors. Treatment with erdafitinib decreased T-cell receptor (TCR) clonality, reflecting a broadening of the TCR repertoire induced by tumor cell death, whereas combination with anti–PD-1 led to increased TCR clonality, suggesting a more focused antitumor T-cell response. Our results showed that the combination of erdafitinib and anti–PD-1 drives expansion of T-cell clones and immunologic changes in the tumor microenvironment to support enhanced antitumor immunity and survival.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39ef82160a04751b2f6d5b28b394c18e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.c.6550248