AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the tumor microenvironment (TME) of adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC), a type of cancer with no effective systemic treatment for its metastatic form, distinguishing between two molecular subtypes: ACC-I and ACC-II, with varying prognoses and therapeutic vulnerabilities.
  • - Using RNA-sequencing and advanced imaging techniques, researchers found that most ACC tumors are immunologically "cold" and that ACC-I tumors, associated with poor prognosis, have more immune cells but are confined to the stroma, indicating an immune-excluded TME.
  • - The research highlights the overexpression of the immune checkpoint B7-H4 in ACC-I tumors, which correlates with worse survival outcomes, suggesting that targeting B7-H4 could

Article Abstract

Purpose: Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) is a heterogeneous malignancy, and no effective systemic therapy exists for metastatic disease. We previously described two prognostic ACC molecular subtypes with distinct therapeutic vulnerabilities, ACC-I and ACC-II. In this study, we explored the ACC tumor microenvironment (TME) using RNA-sequencing and spatial biology to identify potential therapeutic targets.

Experimental Design: Tumor samples from 62 ACC patients with available RNA-sequencing data that had been collected as part of previous studies were stained with a panel of 28 validated metal-tagged antibodies. Imaging mass cytometry (IMC) was performed using the Fluidigm Helios CyTOF instrument and analyzed with Visiopharm software. The B7-H4 antibody-drug conjugate AZD8205 was tested in ACC patient-derived xenografts (PDX).

Results: RNA deconvolution revealed that most ACCs are immunologically "cold," with approximately 30% being "hot." ACC-I tumors with a poor prognosis harbored a higher density of immune cells; however, spatial analysis by IMC revealed that ACC-I immune cells were significantly restricted to the stroma, characterizing an immune-excluded TME. ACC-I tumors overexpressed the immune checkpoint B7-H4, and the degree of immune exclusion was directly correlated with B7-H4 expression levels, an independent predictor of poor survival. Two ACC-I/B7-H4-high PDXs obtained 90% complete responses to a single dose of AZD8205, but none were observed with isotype-conjugated payload or in an ACC-II/B7-H4 low PDX.

Conclusions: Spatial analysis revealed that ACC subtypes have distinct TMEs, with enrichment of ACC-I immune cells that are restricted to the stroma. B7-H4 is highly expressed in poor-prognosis ACC-I subtype and is a potential therapeutic target.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10526680PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-0514DOI Listing

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