Abstract 1038P
Background
Immunosuppression mediated by regulatory T cells (Tregs) abrogates the response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Antibody dependent cell cytotoxicity has been suggested as a mechanism by which anti- CTLA-4 Ipilimumab can overcome the cancer promoting effects of Tregs. Similarly, the relative activation of Tregs versus CD4 T cells has been implicated in the response to anti-PD1 immunotherapy. Whilst such associations have been observed within tumours, the relationship between Treg subset size prior to and across both single agent anti PD1 (sICB) and combination anti-PD1/anti-CTLA-4 (cICB) in metastatic melanoma (MM) is relatively unexplored. Here we have analysed the relative abundance of Tregs and contrasted with other subsets in the treatment of MM and associated with oncological outcomes.
Methods
Flow cytometry was used to quantify Tregs in PBMCs from 94 melanoma patients receiving either combined or single agent ICB. Anti-IgG4 was used to stain anti-PD1 and quantify Nivolumab/Pembrolizumab binding in Treg subsets. Observations were secondarily explored in scRNAseq analysis across samples (n=80).
Results
Increasing Treg proportions is associated with a decrease in CD8+ effector phenotypes prior to treatment. ICB expands the Treg subset, with a larger increase seen in single ICB. Patients with less anti-PD1 bound to Tregs in comparison to classical CD4+ T cells had a survival advantage-this effect was not seen in combination therapy. Counts of Tregs were associated with distinct gene expression profiles across T cell subsets.
Conclusions
Treg abundance in peripheral blood is correlated with reduced CD8+ cytotoxicity in melanoma patients and distinct patterns of gene expression. ICB mediated restoration of the immunosuppressive functions of Tregs may negatively impact clinical outcome but only after anti PD1 treatment alone.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
B.P. Fairfax.
Funding
MRC WIMM, Wellcome Trust.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1056P - Real-world usage and adverse events (AE) of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI): A large-scale, automated, GDPR-compliant analysis of hospital records
Presenter: Annelies Verbiest
Session: Poster session 03
1057P - Blinded independent central review versus local investigator assessment of progression-free survival in randomized controlled trials of immunotherapy in advanced cancers: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Presenter: Simeone D'Ambrosio
Session: Poster session 03
1058P - Hyperprogressive disease during immune checkpoint inhibitor: A cloudy phenomenon with real consequences
Presenter: Damien Bruyat
Session: Poster session 03
1059P - Association between tumor longevity and immune-checkpoint inhibitor outcomes: A retrospective study in head and neck, lung, renal/urothelial cancers
Presenter: Rebecca Romanò
Session: Poster session 03
1060P - Comparative investigation of neoadjuvant immunotherapy versus adjuvant immunotherapy in perioperative patients with cancer: A metrology informatics analysis based on machine learning
Presenter: Song-Bin Guo
Session: Poster session 03
1061P - Assessing differential informative censoring in control and experimental arm in trials testing immunotherapy in metastatic cancers: A systematic review
Presenter: Filippo Vitale
Session: Poster session 03
1062P - Effect of the immunological circadian rhythm on the treatment of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer treated with consolidation immunotherapy
Presenter: Èlia Sais
Session: Poster session 03
1063P - Influence of infusion timing on the outcomes of immunotherapy in a multi-tumor cohort
Presenter: Víctor Albarrán Fernández
Session: Poster session 03