Abstract 140P
Background
Tumor-draining lymph nodes are a potent source of antitumor immunity. Upon tumoral invasion, however, progressive immune dysfunction may occur. Whether the composition of metastatic lymph nodes (mLN) can influence or even predict response to immunotherapy remains unclear. This question is especially relevant in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), where the primary tumor is often not accessible for sampling and mLN serve as a substitute to guide immune checkpoint blockade therapy (ICB). Profiling both compartments, we aim to contribute to a better understanding of the NSCLC tumor microenvironment and improve available predictive biomarkers for ICB response.
Methods
Tumor (N=15) and mLN (N=31) samples of 46 treatment-naive advanced NSCLC patients were subjected to single-cell RNA sequencing. For 26 patients, the molecular findings were correlated with durable response to anti-PD-1 backbone therapy.
Results
In this preliminary analysis, we compare the microenvironment of mLN and primary tumor. In total 281,707 cells were recovered for analysis. At major cell type level, mLN house significantly more B cells and monocytes. Plasma cells and macrophages are more abundant at the primary tumor site. Neutrophil abundance is comparable between compartments. For T cells, we see a trend towards enrichment in mLN, albeit not significant. At subtype level, CD4+ naive, follicular helper and regulatory T cells are enriched in mLN, whilst CD4+ T helper 1, CD8+ terminal effector memory and resident memory T cells are more abundant at the primary tumor site. The proportion of exhausted CD8+ T cells does not differ significantly between the two compartments. Predictive analysis is ongoing.
Conclusions
Despite tumoral invasion, the lymph node microenvironment of NSCLC remains more naive, reflective of its native priming function. Interestingly, however, exhausted T cells are not restricted to the primary tumor. How this influences response to ICB remains to be investigated.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
KU Leuven – VIB.
Funding
VIB - KU Leuven; Leerstoel MD Davidse beheer immunologie; FWO Vlaanderen; Stichting Tegen Kanker.
Disclosure
The author has declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
122P - Practice patterns and treatment outcomes of molecular tumour board (MTB)-based personalized cancer therapies: A single-center experience
Presenter: Florian Moik
Session: Poster session 08
123P - Pan-cancer homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) evaluation in patients enrolled in a routine molecular screening program
Presenter: Paula Romero-Lozano
Session: Poster session 08
124P - Incidence of activating frameshift and nonsense mutations in clinically actionable oncogenes
Presenter: Sjors Kas
Session: Poster session 08
125P - Comparison of microarray and next-generation sequencing-based approaches for detection of homologous recombination deficiency
Presenter: Caleb Kidwell
Session: Poster session 08
126P - Genomic landscape and prognostic impact of HER2 low-expressing tumors
Presenter: Aditya Shreenivas
Session: Poster session 08
127P - Clinical utility of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) next generation sequencing (NGS) to inform treatment decisions for patients (pts) with advanced solid tumors
Presenter: Diego Gomez Puerto
Session: Poster session 08
128P - Whole blood transcriptomics identifies transcriptional patterns linked to outcomes in patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors
Presenter: Sara Hone Lopez
Session: Poster session 08
129P - Integrating large data to unveil vulnerabilities for patients with hot tumors resistant to checkpoint inhibition
Presenter: Anlin Li
Session: Poster session 08
130P - Ipilimumab plus nivolumab (Ipi+Nivo) in patients with tumors harboring high tumor mutational burden or load (TMB/TML-H): Results from the Drug Rediscovery Protocol (DRUP)
Presenter: Soemeya Haj Mohammad
Session: Poster session 08
131P - Systemic immune-inflammation index and overall survival with checkpoint inhibitors
Presenter: Oliver Kennedy
Session: Poster session 08