Predictors of responses to immune checkpoint blockade in advanced melanoma
Jacquelot N., Roberti MP., Enot DP., Rusakiewicz S., Ternès N., Jegou S., Woods DM., Sodré AL., Hansen M., Meirow Y., Sade-Feldman M., Burra A., Kwek SS., Flament C., Messaoudene M., Duong CPM., Chen L., Kwon BS., Anderson AC., Kuchroo VK., Weide B., Aubin F., Borg C., Dalle S., Beatrix O., Ayyoub M., Balme B., Tomasic G., Di Giacomo AM., Maio M., Schadendorf D., Melero I., Dréno B., Khammari A., Dummer R., Levesque M., Koguchi Y., Fong L., Lotem M., Baniyash M., Schmidt H., Svane IM., Kroemer G., Marabelle A., Michiels S., Cavalcanti A., Smyth MJ., Weber JS., Eggermont AM., Zitvogel L.
AbstractImmune checkpoint blockers (ICB) have become pivotal therapies in the clinical armamentarium against metastatic melanoma (MMel). Given the frequency of immune related adverse events and increasing use of ICB, predictors of response to CTLA-4 and/or PD-1 blockade represent unmet clinical needs. Using a systems biology-based approach to an assessment of 779 paired blood and tumor markers in 37 stage III MMel patients, we analyzed association between blood immune parameters and the functional immune reactivity of tumor-infiltrating cells after ex vivo exposure to ICB. Based on this assay, we retrospectively observed, in eight cohorts enrolling 190 MMel patients treated with ipilimumab, that PD-L1 expression on peripheral T cells was prognostic on overall and progression-free survival. Moreover, detectable CD137 on circulating CD8+ T cells was associated with the disease-free status of resected stage III MMel patients after adjuvant ipilimumab + nivolumab (but not nivolumab alone). These biomarkers should be validated in prospective trials in MMel.