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Data from Expansion of Candidate HPV-Specific T Cells in the Tumor Microenvironment during Chemoradiotherapy Is Prognostic in HPV16+ Cancers

Authors :
Ann Klopp
Cullen M. Taniguchi
Prajnan Das
Eugene J. Koay
Albert C. Koong
Bruce D. Minsky
Emma B. Holliday
Alexandre Reuben
Jianhua Zhang
Minsoo Kim
Mustapha Ahmed-Kaddar
Cassidy Papso
Rohit Kavukuntla
Geena Mathew
Stephanie Dorta-Estremera
Ananta V. Yanamandra
Sita S. Nookala
Venkatesh Hegde
Travis N. Solley
Jennifer A. Wargo
Kyoko Yoshida-Court
Aparna Mitra
Jingyan Yue
Kathleen M. Schmeler
Amir A. Jazaeri
Andrew P. Futreal
Lois M. Ramondetta
Lilie Lin
Anuja Jhingran
Patricia J. Eifel
K. Jagannadha Sastry
Adilene Olvera
Andrea Y. Delgado Medrano
Greyson Biegert
Julie Sammouri
Ramez Kouzy
Daniel Lin
Travis T. Sims
Bhavana V. Chapman
Xiaogang Wu
Tatiana V. Karpinets
Julianna Bronk
Erica J. Lynn
Molly B. El
Lauren E. Colbert
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection causes 600,000 new cancers worldwide each year. HPV-related cancers express the oncogenic proteins E6 and E7, which could serve as tumor-specific antigens. It is not known whether immunity to E6 and E7 evolves during chemoradiotherapy or affects survival. Using T cells from 2 HPV16+ patients, we conducted functional T-cell assays to identify candidate HPV-specific T cells and common T-cell receptor motifs, which we then analyzed across 86 patients with HPV-related cancers. The HPV-specific clones and E7-related T-cell receptor motifs expanded in the tumor microenvironment over the course of treatment, whereas non–HPV-specific T cells did not. In HPV16+ patients, improved recurrence-free survival was associated with HPV-responsive T-cell expansion during chemoradiotherapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6500c42b679ec75c404b54c140040576
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.c.6550526