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Poster session 02

261P - Dysregulation of immune checkpoint proteins in newly- diagnosed early breast cancer patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy: A comparison between TNBC and non-TNBC patients

Date

21 Oct 2023

Session

Poster session 02

Topics

Tumour Site

Breast Cancer

Presenters

Bernardo Rapoport

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 34 (suppl_2): S278-S324. 10.1016/S0923-7534(23)01258-9

Authors

H. Steel1, C. Benn2, S. Nayler3, T. Smit4, L. Heyman4, L. kwofie1, A. Theron1, N. Hlatswayo1, P. Meyer1, R. Anderson1

Author affiliations

  • 1 Department Of Health, University of Pretoria, 0002 - Pretoria/ZA
  • 2 Surgery, Breast Care Centre of Excellence, 2193 - Johannesburg/ZA
  • 3 Pathology, Gritzman & Thatcher, 2194 - Randburg/ZA
  • 4 Research, The Medical Oncology Centre of Rosebank, 2196 - Johannesburg/ZA

Resources

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Abstract 261P

Background

Breast cancer is associated with up-regulation or down-regulation of proteins in the immune system, to evade anti-tumor immune responses. Soluble forms of immune checkpoint molecules (sICMs) can be measured in human plasma. The study aimed to measure the systemic levels of a series ICMs at diagnosis, post-neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) and post-surgery in newly- diagnosed BC patients (pts) and compare the biological behaviour of these sICMs between TNBC and non-TNBC patients.

Methods

Soluble ICMs were measured using multiplex bead array technology in plasma from 72 BC pts and 45 healthy controls. Data were prospectively obtained and levels were compared between pre-treatment, post-NAC, and post-surgery using non-parametric tests (Mann-Whitney & Kruskal-Wallis).

Results

Following NAC, the plasma levels of six soluble co-stimulatory checkpoints (CD28, CD40, ICOS, CD27, CD80, GITR), all involved in the activation of CD8+ cytotoxic T cells, were significantly increased (p < 0.04-p < 0.00001). Four of the soluble co-inhibitory checkpoints (LAG-3, PDL1, TIM-3 and HVEM) increased significantly post-NAC. PD-1 remained unchanged, while BTLA and CTLA-4 decreased significantly (p < 0.03 and p < 0.00001, respectively). Normalization of sICM seemingly indicates a reversal of systemic immune dysregulation following the administration of NAC in early BC. In contrast, recovery of immune homeostasis may explain the increased levels of several negative checkpoint proteins, albeit with the exceptions of CTLA-4 and PD-1.

Conclusions

This study demonstrates low levels of co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory sICMs in newly-diagnosed, non-metastatic BC pts. Following treatment with NAC, the sICMs levels increase substantially, except CTLA-4. In the case of co-stimulatory sICMs, these novel findings are indicative of an immune-restorative mechanism. The pattern of co-inhibitory sICMs (elevated levels of PD-L1, LAG-3, TIM-3 and HVEM), might be indicative of immune-therapeutic resistance, underscoring the augmentative immune-therapeutic promise of targeting these molecules, either individually or in combination, to improve the outcome of pts with early BC.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Cancer Association of South Africa.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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