AI Article Synopsis

  • Current biomarkers for selecting cancer patients for PD-1 inhibitors, like PD-L1 expression, are often unreliable, particularly in malignant pleural mesothelioma, prompting a search for more effective markers.
  • In a study involving 144 patients, researchers analyzed immune cells in tumors to determine their relationship with treatment outcomes and discovered that traditional markers like total CD8+ T cells and macrophage presence did not predict patient survival benefits.
  • The study revealed that the presence of PD-1-expressing CD8+ T cells and PD-1-expressing macrophages is an independent predictor of progression-free survival, indicating their potential as valuable biomarkers for immunotherapy success.

Article Abstract

Background: Few tissue biomarkers exist to date that could enrich patient with cancer populations to benefit from immune checkpoint blockade by programmed cell death protein 1/ligand-1 (PD-/L-1) inhibitors. PD-L1 expression has value in this context in some tumor types but is an imperfect predictor of clinical benefit. In malignant pleural mesothelioma, PD-L1 expression is not predictive of the benefit from PD-1 blockade. We aimed to identify novel markers in malignant pleural mesothelioma to select patients better.

Methods: We performed a multiplex-immune histochemistry analysis of tumor samples from the phase III PROMISE-meso study, which randomized 144 pretreated patients to receive either pembrolizumab or standard second-line chemotherapy. Our panel focused on CD8+T cell, CD68+macrophages, and the expression of PD-1 and PD-L1 on these and cancer cells. We analyzed single and double positive cells within cancer tissues (infiltrating immune cells) and in the stroma. In addition, we performed cell neighborhood analysis. The cell counts were compared with clinical outcomes, including responses, progression-free and overall survivals.

Results: We confirmed the absence of predictive value for PD-L1 in this cohort of patients. Furthermore, total CD8 T cells, CD68+macrophages, or inflammatory subtypes (desert, excluded, inflamed) did not predict outcomes. In contrast, PD-1-expressing CD8+T cells (exhausted T cells) and PD-1-expressing CD68+macrophages were both independent predictors of progression-free survival benefit from pembrolizumab. Patients with tumors simultaneously harboring PD1+T cells and PD-1+macrophages benefited the most from immune therapy.

Conclusion: We analyzed a large cohort of patients within a phase III study and found that not only PD-1+CD8 T cells but also PD-1+CD68+ macrophages are predictive. This data provides evidence for the first time for the existence of PD-1+macrophages in mesothelioma and their clinical relevance for immune checkpoint blockade.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10603330PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-007585DOI Listing

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