A 52-year-old man presented with sarcomatoid diffuse pleural mesothelioma that had relapsed at an isolated site after a complete response to dual-immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). Targeted sequencing exhibited amplification of chromosome 9p24, encompassing JAK2, PD-L1, PD-L2, and PTPRD in the relapsed (post-ICI) tumor, compared with baseline (pre-ICI). On multiplex immunofluorescence, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) and CD8 + cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) made up most of the cells in baseline and relapsed tumor (59% and 47%, respectively). Baseline tumor cells expressed genes linked to extracellular matrix remodeling and epithelial-mesenchymal transition, intermixed with M2-like TAMs and tissue-resident, effector-like CTLs. Relapsed tumor cells shifted to a growth factor-driven phenotype (NT5E, NOD1, GATA2, FN1, PDCD1LG2) that is known to cause functional impairment of CTLs, which then transitioned to an exhausted state (FCRL3, CST7, GPR171, TRAT1, LAG3); exhausted CD8 + and CD4 + T cells are seen in the peripheral blood at relapse. TAMs were enriched in antigen-presentation (CD80, CD86, CXCL10), extracellular matrix–degradation (MMP9, CTSL), and CTL-suppression (ARG1, PLA2G7) pathways. Our analyses revealed that regional immunosuppression mediated by adaptive reprogramming of tumor-cell and immune-cell (TAMs, CTLs)-intrinsic changes—rather than by immune evasion or stromal exclusion—served as a mechanism of acquired resistance to dual-ICI therapy.
Ollila et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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