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Neoadjuvant therapy induces a potent immune response to sarcoma, dominated by myeloid and B cells

Authors :
Peter H. Goff
Laura Riolobos
Bonnie J. LaFleur
Matthew B. Spraker
Y. David Seo
Kimberly S. Smythe
Jean S. Campbell
Robert H. Pierce
Yuzheng Zhang
Qianchuan He
Edward Y. Kim
Stephanie K. Schaub
Gabrielle M. Kane
Jose G. Mantilla
Eleanor Y. Chen
Robert Ricciotti
Matthew J. Thompson
Lee D. Cranmer
Michael J. Wagner
Elizabeth T. Loggers
Robin L. Jones
Erin Murphy
Wendy M. Blumenschein
Terrill K. McClanahan
Jon Earls
Kevin C. Flanagan
Natalie A. LaFranzo
Teresa S. Kim
Seth M. Pollack
Source :
Clin Cancer Res
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose: To characterize changes in the soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) tumor immune microenvironment induced by standard neoadjuvant therapy with the goal of informing neoadjuvant immunotherapy trial design. Experimental Design: Paired pre- and postneoadjuvant therapy specimens were retrospectively identified for 32 patients with STSs and analyzed by three modalities: multiplexed IHC, NanoString, and RNA sequencing with ImmunoPrism analysis. Results: All 32 patients, representing a variety of STS histologic subtypes, received neoadjuvant radiotherapy and 21 (66%) received chemotherapy prior to radiotherapy. The most prevalent immune cells in the tumor before neoadjuvant therapy were myeloid cells (45% of all immune cells) and B cells (37%), with T (13%) and natural killer (NK) cells (5%) also present. Neoadjuvant therapy significantly increased the total immune cells infiltrating the tumors across all histologic subtypes for patients receiving neoadjuvant radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy. An increase in the percentage of monocytes and macrophages, particularly M2 macrophages, B cells, and CD4+ T cells was observed postneoadjuvant therapy. Upregulation of genes and cytokines associated with antigen presentation was also observed, and a favorable pathologic response (≥90% necrosis postneoadjuvant therapy) was associated with an increase in monocytic infiltrate. Upregulation of the T-cell checkpoint TIM3 and downregulation of OX40 were observed posttreatment. Conclusions: Standard neoadjuvant therapy induces both immunostimulatory and immunosuppressive effects within a complex sarcoma microenvironment dominated by myeloid and B cells. This work informs ongoing efforts to incorporate immune checkpoint inhibitors and novel immunotherapies into the neoadjuvant setting for STSs.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin Cancer Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d77c88b373f04465e2747dda01eccc25