A Subset of Localized Prostate Cancer Displays an Immunogenic Phenotype Associated with Losses of Key Tumor Suppressor Genes

Carla Calagua(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Miriam Ficial(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Caroline S. Jansen(Emory University), Taghreed Hirz(Massachusetts General Hospital), Luke del Balzo(Emory University), Scott Wilkinson(National Cancer Institute), Ross Lake(National Cancer Institute), Anson T. Ku(National Cancer Institute), Olga Voznesensky(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), David B. Sykes(Harvard University), Philip J. Saylor(Harvard University), Huihui Ye(University of California, Los Angeles), Sabina Signoretti(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Haydn Kissick(Emory University), Adam G. Sowalsky(National Cancer Institute), Steven P. Balk(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), David J. Einstein(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center)
Clinical Cancer Research
June 24, 2021
Cited by 47Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Purpose: A subset of primary prostate cancer expresses programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), but whether they have a unique tumor immune microenvironment or genomic features is unclear. Experimental Design: We selected PD-L1–positive high-grade and/or high-risk primary prostate cancer, characterized tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes with multiplex immunofluorescence, and identified genomic alterations in immunogenic and nonimmunogenic tumor foci. Results: One quarter of aggressive localized prostate cancer cases (29/115) had tumor PD-L1 expression more than 5%. This correlated with increased density of CD8+ T cells, a large fraction coexpressing PD-1, versus absent PD-1 expression on sparse CD8 T cells in unselected cases. Most CD8+PD-1+ cells did not express terminal exhaustion markers (TIM3 or LAG3), while a subset expressed TCF1. Consistent with these CD8+PD-1+TCF1+ cells being progenitors, they were found in antigen-presenting cell niches in close proximity to MHC-II+ cells. CD8 T-cell density in immunogenic prostate cancer and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) was nearly identical. Shallow RB1 and BRCA2 losses, and deep deletions of CHD1, were prevalent, the latter being strongly associated with a dendritic cell gene set in The Cancer Genome Atlas. Tumor mutation burden was variable; neither high microsatellite instability nor CDK12 alterations were present. Conclusions: A subset of localized prostate cancer is immunogenic, manifested by PD-L1 expression and CD8+ T-cell content comparable with RCC. The CD8+ T cells include effector cells and exhausted progenitor cells, which may be expanded by immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Genomic losses of RB1, BRCA2, and CHD1 may be drivers of this phenotype. These findings indicate that immunotherapies may be effective in biomarker-selected subpopulations of patients with localized prostate cancer.


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