학술논문

Evolution of Neoantigen Landscape during Immune Checkpoint Blockade in Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer
Document Type
article
Source
Cancer Discovery. 7(3)
Subject
Prevention
Cancer
Immunization
Clinical Research
Lung
Lung Cancer
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Antigens
Neoplasm
Antineoplastic Agents
Immunological
CTLA-4 Antigen
Carcinoma
Non-Small-Cell Lung
Cell Cycle Checkpoints
Cohort Studies
Drug Resistance
Neoplasm
Female
Humans
Immunotherapy
Ipilimumab
Janus Kinase 1
Janus Kinase 2
Lung Neoplasms
Male
Middle Aged
Mutation
Nivolumab
Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor
Receptors
Antigen
T-Cell
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have shown significant therapeutic responses against tumors containing increased mutation-associated neoantigen load. We have examined the evolving landscape of tumor neoantigens during the emergence of acquired resistance in patients with non-small cell lung cancer after initial response to immune checkpoint blockade with anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-1/anti-CTLA-4 antibodies. Analyses of matched pretreatment and resistant tumors identified genomic changes resulting in loss of 7 to 18 putative mutation-associated neoantigens in resistant clones. Peptides generated from the eliminated neoantigens elicited clonal T-cell expansion in autologous T-cell cultures, suggesting that they generated functional immune responses. Neoantigen loss occurred through elimination of tumor subclones or through deletion of chromosomal regions containing truncal alterations, and was associated with changes in T-cell receptor clonality. These analyses provide insight into the dynamics of mutational landscapes during immune checkpoint blockade and have implications for the development of immune therapies that target tumor neoantigens.Significance: Acquired resistance to immune checkpoint therapy is being recognized more commonly. This work demonstrates for the first time that acquired resistance to immune checkpoint blockade can arise in association with the evolving landscape of mutations, some of which encode tumor neoantigens recognizable by T cells. These observations imply that widening the breadth of neoantigen reactivity may mitigate the development of acquired resistance. Cancer Discov; 7(3); 264-76. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Yang, p. 250This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 235.