Prediction of Immunotherapy Response in Melanoma through Combined Modeling of Neoantigen Burden and Immune-Related Resistance Mechanisms. Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research Abbott, C. W., Boyle, S. M., Pyke, R. M., McDaniel, L. D., Levy, E., Navarro, F. C., Mellacheruvu, D., Zhang, S. V., Tan, M., Santiago, R., Rusan, Z. M., Milani, P., Bartha, G., Harris, J., McClory, R., Snyder, M. P., Jang, S., Chen, R. 2021; 27 (15): 4265-4276

Abstract

PURPOSE: While immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has become a pillar of cancer treatment, biomarkers that consistently predict patient response remain elusive due to the complex mechanisms driving immune response to tumors. We hypothesized that a multi-dimensional approach modeling both tumor and immune-related molecular mechanisms would better predict ICB response than simpler mutation-focused biomarkers, such as tumor mutational burden (TMB).EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Tumors from a cohort of patients with late-stage melanoma (n = 51) were profiled using an immune-enhanced exome and transcriptome platform. We demonstrate increasing predictive power with deeper modeling of neoantigens and immune-related resistance mechanisms to ICB.RESULTS: Our neoantigen burden score, which integrates both exome and transcriptome features, more significantly stratified responders and nonresponders (P = 0.016) than TMB alone (P = 0.049). Extension of this model to include immune-related resistance mechanisms affecting the antigen presentation machinery, such as HLA allele-specific LOH, resulted in a composite neoantigen presentation score (NEOPS) that demonstrated further increased association with therapy response (P = 0.002).CONCLUSIONS: NEOPS proved the statistically strongest biomarker compared with all single-gene biomarkers, expression signatures, and TMB biomarkers evaluated in this cohort. Subsequent confirmation of these findings in an independent cohort of patients (n = 110) suggests that NEOPS is a robust, novel biomarker of ICB response in melanoma.

View details for DOI 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-4314

View details for PubMedID 34341053