Xuefeng Wang, Tingyi Li, Robbert J C Slebos, Ritu Chaudhary, Jose A Guevara-Patino, Marcelo Bonomi, Nabil F Saba, Christine H Chung
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Immunotherapy holds significant promise for treating head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), yet responses are limited to a subset of patients. This research investigates whether analyzing the peripheral T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire could help identify patients who are more likely to benefit from a combination treatment of cetuximab and nivolumab. We report here updated correlative analysis using all samples profiled with deep immunoSEQ assay to study the peripheral TCR repertoires in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients enrolled in a phase I/II trial (NCT03370276). TCR repertoires were analyzed in 67 patients. Of these, 64 had available baseline data. Overall, our findings confirm that a more polyclonal peripheral TCR repertoire is associated with improved response to concurrent cetuximab and nivolumab in HNSCC. While the baseline productive Simpson clonality did not reach statistically significant differences in response groups, significant differences were observed within the HPV-negative subgroup and among patients who had received previous ICI therapy. Additionally, the TCR diversity at baseline and early follow-up was associated with overall survival. TRBV/TRBJ gene usage analysis also identified specific gene pairs associated with patient outcomes. Furthermore, our analysis indicates that the TCR clonality patterns are modulated by prior treatment exposures and tumor HPV status, suggesting a cohort expansion within these subgroups for further validation. Together, this study demonstrates the feasibility of leveraging the peripheral T-cell repertoire profiling and clonality dynamics as predictive biomarkers for immunotherapy efficacy in HNSCC.
期刊介绍:
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy has the basic aim of keeping readers informed of the latest research results in the fields of oncology and immunology. As knowledge expands, the scope of the journal has broadened to include more of the progress being made in the areas of biology concerned with biological response modifiers. This helps keep readers up to date on the latest advances in our understanding of tumor-host interactions.
The journal publishes short editorials including "position papers," general reviews, original articles, and short communications, providing a forum for the most current experimental and clinical advances in tumor immunology.