Abstract 1496P
Background
Since the recruitment and polarization of TAMs are regulated by CSF-1R/CSF-1, the expression levels of these factors may be indicative of TAM physiology and correlated with antitumoral immunity and response to therapy. This study aimed to investigate the influence of CSF-1R/CSF-1 activation levels on tumor response in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) receiving first-line immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy.
Methods
This bicentric study included a prospective cohort of 88 patients with advanced NSCLC treated with ICIs as first-line therapy. Plasma levels of CSF-1 were assessed by ELISA. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were used both for immunomodulatory assays and to produce macrophages through CSF-1 treatment. To assess the mechanism of CSF-1-mediated suppression of immunotherapy, Isolated PBMC, activated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) with or without pembrolizumab (20 nM), were cultured alone, or in the presence of macrophages or on an established NSCLC monolayer. INFγ levels and CD8+ proliferation/activation were assessed through ELISA assay and flow cytometry respectively.
Results
Plasma levels of CSF-1 were found to be higher in patients resistant to ICI therapy (8898 vs. 14031 pg/mL, p < 0.001). Higher levels of CSF-1 were associated with poor therapy response (RR = 7,944; p = 0.013), disease progression (RR = 8.556; p < 0.001), and shorter survivals (PFS, 50 days vs. 305 days; p < 0.001; OS, 248 days vs. 1369 days, p < 0.01). In vitro, recombinant CSF-1 inhibited CD8+ activation and interferon gamma (INFγ) production that was induced by PHA and Pembrolizumab. The use of Pexidartinib (PLX-3397), a CSF-1R inhibitor, reversed the effects of CSF-1 by restoring lymphocyte activation. However, these effects were dependent on the presence of monocytes/macrophages, suggesting that the immune suppression mediated by CSF-1 was an indirect effect resulting from the stimulation of monocytes that promote their differentiation into macrophages.
Conclusions
Our study suggests that plasma levels of CSF-1 could serve as a useful predictive biomarker for resistance to ICIs, while targeting the CSF-1/CSF-1R signaling pathway could potentially overcome resistance to ICIs in patients with NSCLC.
Clinical trial identification
Legal entity responsible for the study
University of Paris Saclay, UVSQ.
Funding
Legs Poix Subvention (2018).
Disclosure
E. Giroux-Leprieur: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Role: Amgen, AstraZeneca, Ipsen, Janssen, Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Takeda, Sanofi. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1489P - To investigate the differences in efficacy between immunotherapy and combined immunotherapy in elderly patients with non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Ye Mao
Session: Poster session 21
1490P - Removal of TNF-Rs frees TNF-α’s anticancer activity alone or in combination chemo- or immunotherapy in advanced NSCLC
Presenter: Mustafa Bozkurt
Session: Poster session 21
1491P - PD-L1 TPS ≥50% predicts durable response after discontinuing immune checkpoint inhibitors in metastatic non-small cell lung cancer patients
Presenter: Jeongmin Seo
Session: Poster session 21
1493P - A phase II, multi-center, open-label, dose-optimization study evaluating telomere targeting agent THIO sequenced with cemiplimab in patients with advanced NSCLC: Preliminary results
Presenter: Tomasz Jankowski
Session: Poster session 21
1495P - Cemiplimab plus chemotherapy versus chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer with PD-L1 ≥1%: EMPOWER-Lung 3 results
Presenter: Ana Baramidze
Session: Poster session 21
1497P - Gut microbiome is associated with the clinical response to anti-PD-1 based immunotherapy in untreated advanced non-small-cell lung cancer
Presenter: Yawen Bin
Session: Poster session 21
1498P - HGF/MET pathway is associated with poor efficacy of Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in advanced-stage NSCLC
Presenter: Assya Akli
Session: Poster session 21