AI Article Synopsis

  • Immune checkpoint inhibitors can help some patients with advanced cancer, but others who don't respond to them may benefit from adding chemotherapy.
  • Researchers found that a specific group of circulating CD8+ T cells (CX3CR1+CD8+ T cells) in patients with metastatic melanoma are resilient to chemotherapy and are increased when combined with a specific treatment (paclitaxel and carboplatin + PD-1 blockade).
  • These CX3CR1+CD8+ T cells possess unique traits like the ability to resist chemotherapy, kill tumor cells, and effectively migrate to tumor sites, suggesting that enhancing these cells might improve responses to cancer therapies.

Article Abstract

Although immune checkpoint inhibitors have resulted in durable clinical benefits in a subset of patients with advanced cancer, some patients who did not respond to initial anti-PD-1 therapy have been found to benefit from the addition of salvage chemotherapy. However, the mechanism responsible for the successful chemoimmunotherapy is not completely understood. Here we show that a subset of circulating CD8+ T cells expressing the chemokine receptor CX3CR1 are able to withstand the toxicity of chemotherapy and are increased in patients with metastatic melanoma who responded to chemoimmunotherapy (paclitaxel and carboplatin plus PD-1 blockade). These CX3CR1+CD8+ T cells have effector memory phenotypes and the ability to efflux chemotherapy drugs via the ABCB1 transporter. In line with clinical observation, our preclinical models identified an optimal sequencing of chemoimmunotherapy that resulted in an increase of CX3CR1+CD8+ T cells. Taken together, we found a subset of PD-1 therapy-responsive CD8+ T cells that were capable of withstanding chemotherapy and executing tumor rejection with their unique abilities of drug efflux (ABCB1), cytolytic activity (granzyme B and perforin), and migration to and retention (CX3CR1 and CD11a) at tumor sites. Future strategies to monitor and increase the frequency of CX3CR1+CD8+ T cells may help to design effective chemoimmunotherapy to overcome cancer resistance to immune checkpoint blockade therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5931117PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.97828DOI Listing

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