Spatial immunophenotypes predict response to anti-PD1 treatment and capture distinct paths of T cell evasion in triple negative breast cancer

Dora Hammerl(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), John W.M. Martens(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Mieke Timmermans(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Marcel Smid(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Anita Trapman-Jansen(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Renée Foekens(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Olga I. Isaeva(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Leonie Voorwerk(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Hayri E. Balcıoğlu(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Rebecca Wijers(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute), Iris Nederlof(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Roberto Salgado(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre), Hugo M. Horlings(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Marleen Kok(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Reno Debets(Erasmus MC Cancer Institute)
Nature Communications
September 27, 2021
Cited by 244Open Access
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Abstract

Only a subgroup of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) responds to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). To better understand lack of response to ICI, we analyze 681 TNBCs for spatial immune cell contextures in relation to clinical outcomes and pathways of T cell evasion. Excluded, ignored and inflamed phenotypes can be captured by a gene classifier that predicts prognosis of various cancers as well as anti-PD1 response of metastatic TNBC patients in a phase II trial. The excluded phenotype, which is associated with resistance to anti-PD1, demonstrates deposits of collagen-10, enhanced glycolysis, and activation of TGFβ/VEGF pathways; the ignored phenotype, also associated with resistance to anti-PD1, shows either high density of CD163+ myeloid cells or activation of WNT/PPARγ pathways; whereas the inflamed phenotype, which is associated with response to anti-PD1, revealed necrosis, high density of CLEC9A+ dendritic cells, high TCR clonality independent of neo-antigens, and enhanced expression of T cell co-inhibitory receptors.


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