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Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy 2/2023

30-07-2022 | Original Article

Single-cell analysis of peripheral CD8+ T cell responses in patients receiving checkpoint blockade immunotherapy for cancer

Authors: Niloufar Khojandi, Louis Connelly, Alexander Piening, Stella G. Hoft, Michelle Pherson, Maureen J. Donlin, Richard J. DiPaolo, Ryan M. Teague

Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | Issue 2/2023

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Abstract

Checkpoint blockade immunotherapy has become a first-line treatment option for cancer patients, with success in increasingly diverse cancer types. Still, many patients do not experience durable responses and the reasons for clinical success versus failure remain largely undefined. Investigation of immune responses within the tumor microenvironment can be highly informative but access to tumor tissue is not always available, highlighting the need to identify biomarkers in the blood that correlate with clinical success. Here, we used single-cell RNA sequencing coupled with T cell receptor sequencing to define CD8+ T cell responses in peripheral blood of two patients with melanoma before and after immunotherapy with either anti-PD-1 (nivolumab) alone or the combination of anti-PD-1 and CTLA-4 (ipilimumab). Both treatment regimens increased transcripts associated with cytolytic effector function and decreased transcripts associated with naive T cells. These responses were further evaluated at the protein level and extended to a total of 53 patients with various cancer types. Unexpectedly, the induction of CD8+ T cell responses associated with cytolytic function was variable and did not predict therapeutic success in this larger patient cohort. Rather, a decrease in the frequency of T cells with a naive-like phenotype was consistently observed after immunotherapy and correlated with prolonged patient survival. In contrast, a more detailed clonotypic analysis of emerging and expanding CD8+ T cells in the blood revealed that a majority of individual T cell clones responding to immunotherapy acquired a transcriptional profile consistent with cytolytic effector function. These results suggest that responses to checkpoint blockade immunotherapy are evident and traceable in patients’ blood, with outcomes predicted by the simultaneous loss of naive-like CD8+ T cells and the expansion of mostly rare and diverse cytotoxic CD8+ T cell clones.
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Metadata
Title
Single-cell analysis of peripheral CD8+ T cell responses in patients receiving checkpoint blockade immunotherapy for cancer
Authors
Niloufar Khojandi
Louis Connelly
Alexander Piening
Stella G. Hoft
Michelle Pherson
Maureen J. Donlin
Richard J. DiPaolo
Ryan M. Teague
Publication date
30-07-2022
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy / Issue 2/2023
Print ISSN: 0340-7004
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0851
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-022-03263-9

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