Tissue-resident memory and circulating T cells are early responders to pre-surgical cancer immunotherapy

组织驻留记忆T细胞和循环T细胞是术前癌症免疫疗法的早期反应者

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作者:Adrienne M Luoma ,Shengbao Suo ,Yifan Wang ,Lauren Gunasti ,Caroline B M Porter ,Nancy Nabilsi ,Jenny Tadros ,Andrew P Ferretti ,Sida Liao ,Cagan Gurer ,Yu-Hui Chen ,Shana Criscitiello ,Cora A Ricker ,Danielle Dionne ,Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen ,Ravindra Uppaluri ,Robert I Haddad ,Orr Ashenberg ,Aviv Regev ,Eliezer M Van Allen ,Gavin MacBeath ,Jonathan D Schoenfeld ,Kai W Wucherpfennig

Abstract

Neoadjuvant immune checkpoint blockade has shown promising clinical activity. Here, we characterized early kinetics in tumor-infiltrating and circulating immune cells in oral cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-1/CTLA-4 in a clinical trial (NCT02919683). Tumor-infiltrating CD8 T cells that clonally expanded during immunotherapy expressed elevated tissue-resident memory and cytotoxicity programs, which were already active prior to therapy, supporting the capacity for rapid response. Systematic target discovery revealed that treatment-expanded tumor T cell clones in responding patients recognized several self-antigens, including the cancer-specific antigen MAGEA1. Treatment also induced a systemic immune response characterized by expansion of activated T cells enriched for tumor-infiltrating T cell clonotypes, including both pre-existing and emergent clonotypes undetectable prior to therapy. The frequency of activated blood CD8 T cells, notably pre-treatment PD-1-positive KLRG1-negative T cells, was strongly associated with intra-tumoral pathological response. These results demonstrate how neoadjuvant checkpoint blockade induces local and systemic tumor immunity.

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