03/22/2024

Multimodal Real World Data Reveals Immunogenomic Drivers of Acquired and Primary Resistance to Immune Checkpoint Blockade

AACR 2024 PRESENTATION
Authors Mohamed Reda Keddar, Sebastian Carrasco Pro, Kathleen Burke, Ana Camelo Stewart, Mark Cobbold, Ross Stewart, Sajan Khosla, Ben Sidders, Scott Hammond, Douglas C. Palmer, Jonathan Dry, Martin L. Miller

Background: Why some patients fail or have short lived response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) immunotherapy remains largely unknown. While baseline molecular assessments have provided clues to prognostic factors, insights into resistance drivers remains elusive. This is partially due to the difficulty in getting access to post progression samples from patients that were either primary resistant or developed acquired resistance after an initial response to ICB. Thus, the tumour-intrinsic and -extrinsic features that are selected for during progression and potentially drive primary and acquired resistance to immunotherapy remain underexplored.

Methods: To compare clinical features and immunogenomic drivers of acquired and primary resistance to ICB across major cancers, we analysed and annotated de-identified patient records in the Tempus real-world database. We built an immuno-oncology cohort consisting of >2500 multimodal (DNA, RNA and clinical outcome data) pre-treatment baseline with >1500 post-treatment tumour biopsy samples from mainly NSCLC, TNBC, HNC and Bladder cancer patients. We used bulk RNA-seq data to estimate activation of the hallmark oncogenic pathways and immune cell composition and used panel DNA-seq data (>500 genes) to quantify mutation selection at the gene and pathway levels using dndscv.

Results: Compared to acquired, primary resistant patients tended to have a higher observation of liver lesions at progression. Post-ICB, acquired resistant NSCLC and HNC patients showed a significantly inflamed tumour microenvironment (TME) characterised by higher estimation of infiltration of T cells and myeloid cells and higher activation of interferon gamma (IFNg) signalling as compared to primary resistant patients. In addition, in post-ICB acquired resistance in NSCLC we observed selection for mutations in genes involved in known immunomodulatory pathways, including loss-of-function mutations in B2M. Consistently, acquired resistance patients showed stronger selection for mutations in Hedgehog and Notch pathways as compared to primary resistance patients across NSCLC, HNC and TNBC post-ICB.

Conclusions: Acquired and primary ICB resistant patients have distinct clinical and molecular features at progression. Their tumoursʼ TME is fundamentally different with acquired resistance TMEs being infiltrated with immune cells albeit escaped post progression. In addition, ICB selects mutations that potentially activate pathways such as Notch and Hedgehog. This multi-modal Real-World Data with post therapy biopsies has given insights for patient selection strategies and provides rational into combination treatment options for acquired resistant patients.

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