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Gil V, Miranda S, Riisnaes R, Gurel B, D'Ambrosio M, Vasciaveo A, Crespo M, Ferreira A, Brina D, Troiani M, Sharp A, Sheehan B, Christova R, Seed G, Figueiredo I, Lambros M, Dolling D, Rekowski J, Alajati A, Clarke M, Pereira R, Flohr P, Fowler G, Boysen G, Sumanasuriya S, Bianchini D, Rescigno P, Aversa C, Tunariu N, Guo C, Paschalis A, Bertan C, Buroni L, Ning J, Carreira S, Workman P, Swain A, Califano A, Shen MM, Alimonti A, Neeb A, Welti J, Yuan W, de Bono J. HER3 Is an Actionable Target in Advanced Prostate Cancer. Cancer Res 2021; 81:6207-6218. [PMID: 34753775 PMCID: PMC8932336 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-21-3360] [Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/04/2021] [Revised: 10/20/2021] [Accepted: 10/25/2021] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
It has been recognized for decades that ERBB signaling is important in prostate cancer, but targeting ERBB receptors as a therapeutic strategy for prostate cancer has been ineffective clinically. However, we show here that membranous HER3 protein is commonly highly expressed in lethal prostate cancer, associating with reduced time to castration resistance (CR) and survival. Multiplex immunofluorescence indicated that the HER3 ligand NRG1 is detectable primarily in tumor-infiltrating myelomonocytic cells in human prostate cancer; this observation was confirmed using single-cell RNA sequencing of human prostate cancer biopsies and murine transgenic prostate cancer models. In castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) patient-derived xenograft organoids with high HER3 expression as well as mouse prostate cancer organoids, recombinant NRG1 enhanced proliferation and survival. Supernatant from murine bone marrow-derived macrophages and myeloid-derived suppressor cells promoted murine prostate cancer organoid growth in vitro, which could be reversed by a neutralizing anti-NRG1 antibody and ERBB inhibition. Targeting HER3, especially with the HER3-directed antibody-drug conjugate U3-1402, exhibited antitumor activity against HER3-expressing prostate cancer. Overall, these data indicate that HER3 is commonly overexpressed in lethal prostate cancer and can be activated by NRG1 secreted by myelomonocytic cells in the tumor microenvironment, supporting HER3-targeted therapeutic strategies for treating HER3-expressing advanced CRPC. SIGNIFICANCE: HER3 is an actionable target in prostate cancer, especially with anti-HER3 immunoconjugates, and targeting HER3 warrants clinical evaluation in prospective trials.
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MESH Headings
- Animals
- Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/pharmacology
- Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological/pharmacology
- Apoptosis
- Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics
- Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism
- Camptothecin/analogs & derivatives
- Camptothecin/pharmacology
- Cell Proliferation
- Follow-Up Studies
- Humans
- Male
- Mice, Inbred NOD
- Mice, SCID
- Neuregulin-1/genetics
- Neuregulin-1/metabolism
- Organoids/drug effects
- Organoids/metabolism
- Organoids/pathology
- Prognosis
- Prospective Studies
- Prostatic Neoplasms/drug therapy
- Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics
- Prostatic Neoplasms/metabolism
- Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology
- Receptor, ErbB-3/antagonists & inhibitors
- Receptor, ErbB-3/genetics
- Receptor, ErbB-3/metabolism
- Survival Rate
- Tumor Cells, Cultured
- Tumor Microenvironment
- Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
- Mice
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Carreira S, Porta N, Arce-Gallego S, Seed G, Llop-Guevara A, Bianchini D, Rescigno P, Paschalis A, Bertan C, Baker C, Goodall J, Miranda S, Riisnaes R, Figueiredo I, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Crespo M, Gurel B, Nava Rodrigues D, Pettitt SJ, Yuan W, Serra V, Rekowski J, Lord CJ, Hall E, Mateo J, de Bono JS. Biomarkers Associating with PARP Inhibitor Benefit in Prostate Cancer in the TOPARP-B Trial. Cancer Discov 2021; 11:2812-2827. [PMID: 34045297 PMCID: PMC9414325 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.cd-21-0007] [Citation(s) in RCA: 77] [Impact Index Per Article: 25.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/11/2021] [Revised: 03/23/2021] [Accepted: 05/21/2021] [Indexed: 01/07/2023]
Abstract
PARP inhibitors are approved for treating advanced prostate cancers (APC) with various defective DNA repair genes; however, further studies to clinically qualify predictive biomarkers are warranted. Herein we analyzed TOPARP-B phase II clinical trial samples, evaluating whole-exome and low-pass whole-genome sequencing and IHC and IF assays evaluating ATM and RAD51 foci (testing homologous recombination repair function). BRCA1/2 germline and somatic pathogenic mutations associated with similar benefit from olaparib; greater benefit was observed with homozygous BRCA2 deletion. Biallelic, but not monoallelic, PALB2 deleterious alterations were associated with clinical benefit. In the ATM cohort, loss of ATM protein by IHC was associated with a better outcome. RAD51 foci loss identified tumors with biallelic BRCA and PALB2 alterations while most ATM- and CDK12-altered APCs had higher RAD51 foci levels. Overall, APCs with homozygous BRCA2 deletion are exceptional responders; PALB2 biallelic loss and loss of ATM IHC expression associated with clinical benefit. SIGNIFICANCE: Not all APCs with DNA repair defects derive similar benefit from PARP inhibition. Most benefit was seen among patients with BRCA2 homozygous deletions, biallelic loss of PALB2, and loss of ATM protein. Loss of RAD51 foci, evaluating homologous recombination repair function, was found primarily in tumors with biallelic BRCA1/2 and PALB2 alterations.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2659.
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Tiu C, Welsh L, Jones T, Zachariou A, Prout T, Turner A, Daly R, Tunariu N, Riisnaes R, Gurel B, Crespo M, Carreira S, Vivanco I, Jenkins B, Yap C, Minchom A, Banerji U, deBono J, Lopez J. Preliminary evidence of antitumour activity of Ipatasertib (Ipat) and Atezolizumab (ATZ) in glioblastoma patients (pts) with PTEN loss from the Phase 1 Ice-CAP trial (NCT03673787). Neuro Oncol 2021. [DOI: 10.1093/neuonc/noab195.022] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Aims
Despite improved understanding of effector T-cell trafficking into the central nervous system, initial trials with anti-PD1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have failed to meet their primary endpoints. PTEN loss of function is frequent in GBM and has been correlated with not only poor overall prognosis, but also impaired antitumour responses, including reduced T cell infiltration into tumour and reduced efficacy of ICIs.
Ipatasertib is a novel, potent, selective, small-molecule inhibitor of Akt. We have shown that Ipatasertib efficiently depletes FOXP3+ regulatory T cells from the tumour microenvironment (TME) resulting in increased infiltration of effector T cells in solid tumours (Lopez 2020, AACR).
We hypothesize that the use of AKT inhibition in PTEN glioblastomas may deplete the TME of suppressive immune cells, and render malignant brain tumours more responsive to ICIs. We present updated data for the combination of Ipat+ATZ in patients with glioblastoma.
Method
Patients with relapsed WHO grade IV GBM with stable neurological symptoms ≥5 days prior to enrolment, requiring <3mg Dexamethasone were recruited into two cohorts of this early phase, open-label, single-centre trial studying the combination of Ipatasertib (Ipat) and Atezolizumab (ATZ): a dose finding cohort (A2; n=9) and an expansion cohort (B3; n=7, recruitment ongoing).
The Ice-CAP A2 cohort assessed safety, pharmacodynamic, and preliminary clinical activity of Ipat (200mg or 400mg OD) + ATZ (1200mg Q3W) in pts with potentially resectable relapsed WHO Grade IV GBM. Pts had a 14-21-day run-in phase of Ipat then surgical tumour resection. Combination Ipat+ATZ commenced post surgery. Patients who declined surgery or who were deemed high risk for surgery proceeded directly to combination.
Patients in the expansion cohort B3 commenced directly on Ipat+ATZ at the RP2D of 400mg Ipat with ATZ.
Results
16 evaluable recurrent GBM pts were enrolled across two cohorts. Median age 56 yrs (25-71 yrs). Median ECOG PS 1. Median lines of prior therapy 1 (range 1-4). 10 pts had PTEN loss by IHC (H<30) and/or PTEN mutations on next generation sequencing.
No DLTs, treatment-related (TR) serious adverse events (AEs), or immune-related AEs were observed. Most common TR AEs were G1 diarrhoea (44%), mucositis (17%), rash (28%).
Clinical benefit rate (CR, PR and SD> 6 cycles) at clinical cutoff date (23/02/21) in patients with PTEN aberration was 30% (3/10). A 58-year-old man with PTEN loss had MRI at Cycle 5 showing worsening enhancement suggestive of disease progression. Resection of the lesion showed intense lymphocyte infiltration and pathological CR. He is currently on Cycle 22 with no evidence of disease. Two other patients with PTEN loss with radiological stable disease per RANO criteria remain well on study for >6 cycles.
Conclusion
Combination Ipat+ATZ appears safe and tolerable in GBM pts, with 400mg Ipatasertib OD + 1200mg ATZ Q3W declared as RP2D. Early efficacy signals were detected with PTEN loss being a promising predictive biomarker for response to combination. An expansion cohort enriched with pts with PTEN loss is ongoing.
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Guo C, Figueiredo I, Gurel B, Crespo M, Rekowski J, Carreira S, Neeb A, Sharp A, Fenor de la Maza MD, Rescigno P, Chandran K, Ferreira A, Riisnaes R, Miranda S, Pereira R, Gil V, Seed G, Bertan C, Baker C, Yuan W, de Bono JS. Abstract LB035: B7-H3 as a therapeutic target in prostate cancer. Cancer Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-lb035] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Advanced prostate cancer (PC) is invariably fatal and largely insensitive to established immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). The immune checkpoint, PD-L1 (B7-H1; CD274), is infrequently overexpressed in PC; whilst other B7 family immunomodulatory glycoprotein, B7-H3 (CD276), is overexpressed in many PCs. B7-H3 targeted immunoconjugates are in clinical development. We therefore studied the longitudinal expression of B7-H3 in PC and its associations with advanced PC immunogenomics.
Design: We analysed matching, same-patient, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) metastatic castration resistant PC (mCRPC) (n=98), and treatment-naïve, castration-sensitive PC (CSPC) biopsies (n=43) from patients treated at The Royal Marsden Hospital (UK). Biopsies were analysed by: targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) for deleterious DNA repair gene alterations; immunohistochemistry (IHC) for ATM, PTEN, B7-H3 and mismatch repair (MMR) proteins using validated antibodies; and multi-color immunofluorescence (IF) assays for T cell surface markers to determine the density of tumour infiltrating T lymphocyte (TIL) subsets. Wilcoxon signed-rank test and Mann-Whitney U test compared B7-H3 expression across matched and unmatched subsets, respectively. Spearman correlation determined associations between continuous variables.
Results: Most CRPC and CSPC biopsies had both membranous B7-H3 (mB7-H3) expression (134/141, 95.0%) and cytoplasmic B7-H3 expression (137/141, 97.2%). Analysis of the 43 matched samples sets showed that there was no significant change in mB7-H3 expression as tumours progressed from CSPC to CRPC (median Histoscore [HS] [range]: 130 [5-300] for CSPC vs. 130 [5-290] for CRPC; p=0.6). There was significant interpatient and intratumor heterogeneity in mB7-H3 expression, but a subset of tumour biopsies had very high mB7-H3 expression (HS ≥200: 28/98 [28.6%] CRPC; 14/43 [32.6%] CSPC). mB7-H3 expression strongly associated with the presence of deleterious alterations of genes involved in homologous recombination (HR) repair (p<0.0001), including BRCA2 mutations and homozygous deletions (p=0.0003) as well as ATM loss (p=0.001). mB7-H3 expression did not associate with defective MMR. Interestingly, mB7-H3 expression inversely associated with the density of intra-tumor CD3+ TILs (median: 104.6 TILs/mm2 in B7-H3 low tumors (HS < median) vs. 39.2 TILs/mm2 in B7-H3 high tumours (HS ≥ median), p=0.004) but did not associate with stromal TIL density (p=0.4).
Conclusion: mB7-H3 is highly expressed in advanced PC, with higher expression associating with BRCA2 and ATM loss of function alterations and low intratumor TILs. B7-H3 may be an actionable target for treating this disease subset.
Citation Format: Christina Guo, Ines Figueiredo, Bora Gurel, Matues Crespo, Jan Rekowski, Suzanne Carreira, Antje Neeb, Adam Sharp, Maria D. Fenor de la Maza, Pasquale Rescigno, Khobe Chandran, Ana Ferreira, Ruth Riisnaes, Susana Miranda, Rita Pereira, Veronica Gil, George Seed, Claudia Bertan, Chloe Baker, Wei Yuan, Johann S. de Bono. B7-H3 as a therapeutic target in prostate cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr LB035.
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Al-janabi H, Pu X, Muthana M, Wang N, Crespo M, Gurel B, De Bono J, Brown JE, Lewis CE. Abstract 2797: Changes in the phenotype of macrophages and CD8+ T Cells in the perivascular niche of prostate tumours following androgen deprivation. Cancer Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-2797] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Men with intermediate/high-risk, localized prostate cancer usually receive neoadjuvant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). Although this markedly reduces tumor burden, it may not be curative and over time cancer cells develop resistance to ADT causing the tumor to regrow and spreads to other sites like the bones. Tumors are then termed ‘castration resistant' (CR) and require more aggressive forms of treatment like radical prostatectomy (RP) and chemotherapy. These can have unpleasant side effects so preventing the development of castration resistance and subsequent tumor regrowth/metastasis, would be highly beneficial for patients. A distinct subset of perivascular (PV) tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) expressing the cell-surface receptor, MRC1, has been shown to be proangiogenic, immunosuppressive and to stimulate tumor regrowth after chemotherapy, irradiation or vascular targeting drugs. In the current study, we have examined the density and phenotype of TAMs in PV vs non-PV areas of localized, human prostate tumors and orthotopic mouse (Myc-CaP) tumors following neoadjuvant ADT or castration respectively. In human tumors, MRC1+ TAMs accumulated at highest density around stromal blood vessels, and were abundant in these sites following ADT. In mice, castration markedly reduced primary tumor growth and changed the distribution and phenotype of TAMs and cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocytes (CTLs) just prior to the development of CR. In PV areas of tumors in sham-castrated (i.e. control) mice there were significantly more TAMs expressing MRC1 and the broad-spectrum negative checkpoint regulator, VISTA than in non-PV areas. This was accompanied by the preferential accumulation of CTLs around blood vessels (contrasting with the even distribution of CD4+ (helper) cells and CD4+FOXP3+ Tregs across PV and non-PV areas). Following castration, the PV density of MRC1+ and VISTA+ TAMs was markedly increased, along with that of CTLs expressing the cytotoxic protease, granzyme B - a marker of active CTLs. Although these cells may cross the vasculature into tumors in an active state, passing through a PV niche enriched in VISTA+ TAMs would likely suppress their cytotoxic function before they progressed into the tumor mass. An interesting picture is, therefore, emerging of tumor-promoting TAMs accumulating around blood vessels after various forms of treatment, where they regulate a number of important events including the extravasation and function of various immune effectors.
Citation Format: Haider Al-janabi, Xuan Pu, Munitta Muthana, Ning Wang, Mateus Crespo, Bora Gurel, Johann De Bono, Janet E. Brown, Claire E. Lewis. Changes in the phenotype of macrophages and CD8+ T Cells in the perivascular niche of prostate tumours following androgen deprivation [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 2797.
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Tiu C, Biondo A, Welsh LC, Jones TL, Zachariou A, Prout T, Turner AJ, Daly R, Vivanco I, Yap C, Jenkins B, Crespo M, Riisnaes R, Carreira S, Gurel B, Tunariu N, Minchom A, Banerji U, de Bono JS, Lopez JS. Abstract CT120: Results of the glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cohort of phase 1 trial Ice-CAP (NCT03673787): Preliminary evidence of antitumour activity of Ipatasertib (Ipa) and Atezolizumab (A) in patients (pts) with PTEN loss. Cancer Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-ct120] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Hyperactivation of the PI3K/AKT pathway correlates with impaired antitumour response, including reduced T cell infiltration into tumour and reduced efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). PTEN loss of function, often observed in GBM, may contribute to refractoriness of ICIs in this disease. Methods: The Ice-CAP A2 cohort assessed safety, pharmacodynamic, and preliminary clinical activity of Ipa (200mg or 400mg OD) + A (1200mg Q3W) in pts with potentially resectable relapsed WHO Grade IV GBM. Key inclusion criteria were stable neurological symptoms ≥5 days prior to enrolment, steroid requirement <3mg Dexamethasone. Pts had a 14-21-day run-in phase of Ipa then surgical tumour resection. Combination Ipa+A commenced post surgery. Dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) period included run-in phase to Cycle 1 completion (≤11 wks). Results: 10 evaluable pts were enrolled (3 had Ipa at 200mg, 7 at 400mg); median age 58 (range 25-70y), ECOG score 1; median duration of treatment 8 wks. 2 remain on treatment. No DLTs, treatment-related (TR) serious adverse events (AEs), or immune-related AEs were observed. Most common TR AEs were G1 diarrhoea (60%), mucositis (30%), rash (20%). 7 pts had PTEN loss and/or PTEN mutations. Clinical benefit rate in pts with PTEN aberration was 2/7 (29%): 1 pCR and 1 SD >12wks, both on 400mg Ipa. A 58-year-old man with PTEN loss had MRI at Cycle 5 showing worsening enhancement suggestive of disease progression. Resection of the lesion showed intense lymphocyte infiltration and pathological CR. He is currently on Cycle 18 with no evidence of disease.
Conclusion: Combination Ipa+A appears safe and tolerable in GBM pts, with 400mg Ipa OD + 1200mg A Q3W declared as RP2D. PTEN loss may be a promising predictive biomarker for response to combination. An expansion cohort enriched with pts with PTEN loss is ongoing. Cytokine and FACS data will be presented at AACR
Table 1.Clinical Benefit Rate of glioblastoma patients stratified according to PTEN aberrationsPTEN statusnBest responseClinical Benefit RatePTEN loss on IHC (H<30)51 pCRa2/7 (29%)1 SD >12 wks, ongoingb3 PDPTEN aberration on NGS but PTEN protein expression pending11 PDcPTEN loss of heterozygozity on PCR11 PDWild type PTEN on NGS or IHC (H≥30)33 PDLegend: IHC = immunohistochemistry; NGS = next generation sequencing; PCR = polymerase chain reaction;pCR = pathologic complete response; SD = stable disease; PD = progressive diseaseaExceptional responder with PTEN H=5 on IHC and splice site 75_79+2delGACCTGT on NGSb PTENY68*; c PTENQ298*
Citation Format: Crescens Tiu, Andrea Biondo, Liam C. Welsh, Timothy L. Jones, Anna Zachariou, Toby Prout, Alison J. Turner, Robert Daly, Igor Vivanco, Christina Yap, Ben Jenkins, Mateus Crespo, Ruth Riisnaes, Suzanne Carreira, Bora Gurel, Nina Tunariu, Anna Minchom, Udai Banerji, Johann S. de Bono, Juanita S. Lopez. Results of the glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cohort of phase 1 trial Ice-CAP (NCT03673787): Preliminary evidence of antitumour activity of Ipatasertib (Ipa) and Atezolizumab (A) in patients (pts) with PTEN loss [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr CT120.
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Arce-Gallego S, Llop-Guevara A, Carreira S, Porta N, Fasani R, Bianchini D, Seed G, Rescigno P, Paschalis A, Bertan C, Baker C, Goodall J, Miranda S, Riisnaes R, Figueiredo I, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Gurel B, Rodrigues DN, Yuan W, Rekowski J, Hall E, Serra V, de Bono JS, Mateo J. Abstract CT161: A homologous recombination repair (HRR) functional assay to stratify patients with metastatic prostate cancer for PARP inhibitor treatment in the TOPARP-B clinical trial. Cancer Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-ct161] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are approved for the treatment of metastatic prostate cancer (mPC) associated to various DNA damage repair (DDR) gene mutations; but clinical benefit differs among patients. Biomarkers of homologous recombination repair (HRR) deficiency may help refine patient stratification for a more precise therapy selection. We report an exploratory analysis from the TOPARP-B phase II clinical trial of olaparib in mPC (NCT01682772), investigating the predictive value of an HRR function assay detecting RAD51 foci by immunofluorescence in tumor biopsies. Design: We analyzed formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) primary or metastatic biopsies from mPC patients treated with olaparib in the clinical trial. We evaluated baseline HRR function based on detection of RAD51 and γH2AX foci in geminin-positive tumor cells by immunofluorescence (IF). All samples were scored by two trained readers blinded to genomic and clinical data. Samples were considered HRR deficient (HRD) when RAD51 scores were low, pre-defined as <10% tumor cells presenting ≥5 RAD51 foci/cell. The association of the RAD51 score, response to olaparib and survival (radiographic progression-free survival, rPFS, and overall survival, OS) was analyzed by Chi-Square and log-rank tests. Results: RAD51 and γH2AX were successfully scored in 52 cases, in the same biopsies previously used for NGS in the clinical trial. All tumors showed abundant DNA damage (γH2AX scores >40%). The intra-class correlation score (ICC) between the two blinded readers was 0.88. Overall, 22 of 52 (42%) cases were considered as HRD based on low RAD51 scores. Response rate (based on the composite RECIST/PSA/CTC trial criteria) was 15/22 (68%) vs 7/30 (23%) for patients with low vs high RAD51 scores (p=0.001). Patients with low RAD51 scores also had longer rPFS (median 9.3 vs 2.9 months p=0.002) and overall survival (median 17.4 vs 9.5 months, p=0.05) from initiation of olaparib. All 16/16 cases with BRCA1/2 alterations were identified as RAD51 low. For patients with PALB2 mutations, 2/2 patients with biallelic loss showed RAD51 low scores and responded to olaparib, whereas 2/2 patients with monoallelic PALB2 mutations showed RAD51 high scores and did not respond to olaparib. Mutations in ATM and CDK12 did not associate with low RAD51. Indeed, 10/11 ATM-mutated and 8/10 CDK12-mutated tumors presented high RAD51 scores; RECIST/PSA responses were observed in two patients with ATM mutations and high RAD51 scores. Conclusion: A RAD51-based IF assay performed on FFPE biopsies can detect prostate cancers with deficient HRR function, including BRCA1/2 and biallelic PALB2 mutated cases, and may be useful for patient stratification for PARP inhibitor treatment in prostate cancer. Further validation of the assay in larger cohorts is warranted.
Citation Format: Sara Arce-Gallego, Alba Llop-Guevara, Suzanne Carreira, Nuria Porta, Roberta Fasani, Diletta Bianchini, George Seed, Pasquale Rescigno, Alec Paschalis, Claudia Bertan, Chloe Baker, Jane Goodall, Susana Miranda, Ruth Riisnaes, Ines Figueiredo, Ana Ferreira, Rita Pereira, Bora Gurel, Daniel Nava Rodrigues, Wei Yuan, Jan Rekowski, Emma Hall, Violeta Serra, Johann S. de Bono, Joaquin Mateo. A homologous recombination repair (HRR) functional assay to stratify patients with metastatic prostate cancer for PARP inhibitor treatment in the TOPARP-B clinical trial [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr CT161.
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Fletcher C, Deng L, Orafidiya F, Yuan W, Figueiredo I, Gurel B, Leach D, Issa F, Neeb A, Bogdan D, Dobbs F, Philippou Y, Murphy EA, Zhao SG, Hester J, Bryant RJ, Reed SH, Knudsen KE, Mills IG, de Bono J, Bevan CL. Abstract 2362: Long non-coding RNA NORAD interaction with miR-346 impacts DNA damage response and anti-tumor immunity in prostate cancer. Cancer Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-2362] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
NORAD (NOn-Coding RNA Activated by DNA Damage) is a highly-abundant, evolutionarily-conserved lncRNA. It maintains mitosis, DNA damage repair (DDR), and chromosomal integrity through PUM1/2 sequestration (PUM1/2 activity increases turnover of DDR factors), and through formation of a TOPO2-containing complex critical for genome integrity. We show that NORAD activity is regulated by microRNA-346 (miR-346), which disrupts NORAD:PUM2, interaction, leading to PUM2 destabilization and derepression of PUM1/2 DDR targets in prostate cancer (PCa) cells. RNA-seq reveals widespread miR-346 dysregulation of DNA damage, DNA replication and cell cycle transcripts. A novel method for high resolution, amplification-free genome-wide mapping of double strand DNA breaks (DSBs) (INDUCE-seq) reveals miR-346 induces DSBs specifically at transcription start sites characterized by phospho-PolII/CTCF/ZFX binding - a phenomenon not previously described for any microRNA. Mechanistically, DSBs result from miR-346 activation of transcription, R-loop formation and replicative catastrophe. This results in rapid dose-dependent induction of DNA damage, leading to checkpoint activation and cytosolic DNA accumulation, rescuable by NORAD. This cytosolic DNA activates cytokine-inducing cGAS-STING/RIG-1 innate immune pathways. Indeed, RNA-seq analysis reveals the top NORAD-enriched pathway as interferon signaling, while cytokine arrays reveal secretion of pro-Treg, MDSC and TAM factors by NORAD-overexpressing cells. NORAD inversely correlates with tumor immune response in gene expression data sets, and expression-based immune infiltration scoring predicts increased M2 macrophages, and reduced NK, CD8+ve, Th1 and cytotoxic T cells in NORAD-high vs NORAD-low PCa, indicating an ‘immune-cold' microenvironment. Excitingly, NORAD silencing results in several thousand-fold increase in mature miR-346 without affecting pri-miR levels, supporting NORAD's ability to drive target-directed microRNA decay (TDMD) of miR-346 as a critical novel genome protection mechanism. However, miR-346-induced DNA damage is in part NORAD-independent, since miR-346 induces DSBs within 1h, and in contrast to most miRs is predominantly chromatin-bound (NORAD is cytoplasmic). Critically, miR-346 sensitizes PCa cells to DNA-damaging chemotherapy and PARP inhibition. MiR-346 expression is associated with improved PCa survival, and reduced in high vs low Gleason grade PCa. Notably, NORAD strongly correlates with DDR signatures in early-stage, but not advanced metastatic PCa. Despite its DDR-promoting activity, and in contrast to miR-346, it is associated with worse survival across multiple patient cohorts. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that the NORAD:miR-346 interaction determines DNA damage response and innate immune pathway activity to regulate tumor immune response in PCa.
Citation Format: Claire Fletcher, Lin Deng, Folake Orafidiya, Wei Yuan, Ines Figueiredo, Bora Gurel, Damien Leach, Fadi Issa, Antje Neeb, Denisa Bogdan, Felix Dobbs, Yiannis Philippou, Emma A. Murphy, Shuang G. Zhao, Joanna Hester, Richard J. Bryant, Simon H. Reed, Karen E. Knudsen, Ian G. Mills, Johann de Bono, Charlotte L. Bevan. Long non-coding RNA NORAD interaction with miR-346 impacts DNA damage response and anti-tumor immunity in prostate cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 2362.
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Manickavasagar T, Yuan W, Carreira S, Gurel B, Miranda S, Ferreira A, Crespo M, Riisnaes R, Baker C, O'Brien M, Bhosle J, Popat S, Banerji U, Lopez J, de Bono J, Minchom A. HER3 expression and MEK activation in non-small-cell lung carcinoma. Lung Cancer Manag 2021; 10:LMT48. [PMID: 34084213 PMCID: PMC8162178 DOI: 10.2217/lmt-2020-0031] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/21/2022] Open
Abstract
Aim: We explore HER3 expression in lung adenocarcinoma (adeno-NSCLC) and identify potential mechanisms of HER3 expression. Materials & methods: Tumor samples from 45 patients with adeno-NSCLC were analyzed. HER3 and HER2 expression were identified using immunohistochemistry and bioinformatic interrogation of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Results: HER3 was highly expressed in 42.2% of cases. ERBB3 copy number did not account for HER3 overexpression. Bioinformatic analysis of TCGA demonstrated that MEK activity score (a surrogate of functional signaling) did not correlate with HER3 ligands. ERBB3 RNA expression levels were significantly correlated with MEK activity after adjusting for EGFR expression. Conclusion: HER3 expression is common and is a potential therapeutic target by virtue of frequent overexpression and functional downstream signaling. HER3 expression is common in adeno-NSCLC and is a potential therapeutic target by virtue of frequent overexpression and functional downstream signaling.
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Guo C, Crespo M, Gurel B, Dolling D, Rekowski J, Sharp A, Petremolo A, Sumanasuriya S, Rodrigues DN, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Figueiredo I, Mehra N, Lambros MBK, Neeb A, Gil V, Seed G, Terstappen L, Alimonti A, Drake CG, Yuan W, de Bono JS. CD38 in Advanced Prostate Cancers. Eur Urol 2021; 79:736-746. [PMID: 33678520 PMCID: PMC8175332 DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2021.01.017] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 6.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/13/2020] [Accepted: 01/12/2021] [Indexed: 12/13/2022]
Abstract
Background CD38, a druggable ectoenzyme, is involved in the generation of adenosine, which is implicated in tumour immune evasion. Its expression and role in prostate tumour-infiltrating immune cells (TIICs) have not been elucidated. Objective To characterise CD38 expression on prostate cancer (PC) epithelial cells and TIICs, and to associate this expression with clinical outcomes. Design, setting, and participants RNAseq from 159 patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) in the International Stand Up To Cancer/Prostate Cancer Foundation (SU2C/PCF) cohort and 171 mCRPC samples taken from 63 patients in the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre cohort were analysed. CD38 expression was immunohistochemically scored by a validated assay on 51 castration-resistant PC (CRPC) and matching, same-patient castration-sensitive PC (CSPC) biopsies obtained between 2016 and 2018, and was associated with retrospectively collected clinical data. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis mCRPC transcriptomes were analysed for associations between CD38 expression and gene expression signatures. Multiplex immunofluorescence determined CD38 expression in PC biopsies. Differences in CD38+ TIIC densities between CSPC and CRPC biopsies were analysed using a negative binomial mixed model. Differences in the proportions of CD38+ epithelial cells between non-matched benign prostatic epithelium and PC were compared using Fisher’s exact test. Differences in the proportions of biopsies containing CD38+ tumour epithelial cells between matched CSPC and CRPC biopsies were compared by McNemar’s test. Univariable and multivariable survival analyses were performed using Cox regression models. Results and limitations CD38 mRNA expression in mCRPC was most significantly associated with upregulated immune signalling pathways. CD38 mRNA expression was associated with interleukin (IL)-12, IL-23, and IL-27 signalling signatures as well as immunosuppressive adenosine signalling and T cell exhaustion signatures. CD38 protein was frequently expressed on phenotypically diverse TIICs including B cells and myeloid cells, but largely absent from tumour epithelial cells. CD38+ TIIC density increased with progression to CRPC and was independently associated with worse overall survival. Future studies are required to dissect TIIC CD38 function. Conclusions CD38+ prostate TIICs associate with worse survival and immunosuppressive mechanisms. The role of CD38 in PC progression warrants investigation as insights into its functions may provide rationale for CD38 targeting in lethal PC. Patient summary CD38 is expressed on the surface of white blood cells surrounding PC cells. These cells may impact PC growth and treatment resistance. Patients with PC with more CD38-expressing white blood cells are more likely to die earlier.
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Chandran K, Fenor de la Maza MD, Rekowski J, Shui I, Gurel B, Rescigno P, Cross E, Carreira S, Yuan W, Figueiredo I, Ferreira A, Crespo M, Miranda S, Bertan C, Gil V, Riisnaes R, Cristescu R, Schloss C, Yap C, De Bono JS. Putative biomarkers of response to anti-PD-1 therapy in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). J Clin Oncol 2021. [DOI: 10.1200/jco.2021.39.6_suppl.155] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
155 Background: Metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) is a heterogeneous disease in which molecular stratification is needed to improve clinical outcomes. Targeting programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) elicits durable antitumor responses in multiple cancer types. Putative biomarkers predictive of response to anti-PD-1 therapies include programmed death-ligand-1 (PD-L1), tumour mutational burden (TMB), T cell-inflamed 18-gene expression profile (GEP), and DNA repair defects. Objective: To study potential biomarkers of response in mCRPC to anti-PD-1 therapy (PD-L1, GEP, mismatch repair (MMR) protein), other biomarkers of interest including BRCA2, PALB2, CDK12, PTEN, TP53, SOX2, and to determine association with clinical outcomes. Methods: The study population included 100 men with mCRPC treated at the Royal Marsden Hospital with available fresh mCRPC biopsy tissue. All men had received at least one line of therapy with a next generation hormonal agent and one line of taxane-based chemotherapy. Clinical characteristics and outcomes were extracted from medical records. mCRPC biopsies were assayed by whole exome sequencing (WES), targeted next generation sequencing (NGS), RNA sequencing (RNAseq), GEP score (Nanostring), PD-L1 immunohistochemistry (IHC; DAKO 22C3 assay), SOX2 IHC, ATM IHC. Correlations among these biomarkers and clinical outcomes were assessed. Results: The median age of patients was 68.0 years; 46/84 (54.8%) had de novo metastatic disease at diagnosis and 24/100 (24.0%) patients had visceral disease. Median follow-up from mCRPC biopsy was 56.2 months. The prevalence of loss of protein expression by IHC and/or pathogenic mutation by NGS of MMR was 7/100 (7%). Loss of PTEN and ATM by IHC was 29/100 (29%) and 13/100 (13%) respectively. SOX2 expression (defined as expression in >5% of cells) was 27/100 (27%). The prevalence of TP53 mutation was 25/100 (25%); deleterious alterations of BRCA2 was 9/100 (9%), CDK12 3/100 (3%) and PALB2 1/100 (1%). PDL1 and GEP results were available for 70 and 93 samples respectively. PD-L1 was expressed (combined positive score ≥1) in 24 (33%) mCRPC biopsies; 23 (26%) had high GEP scores (> -0.318). PD-L1 and GEP expression were positively correlated (Phi 0.63). No other biomarkers showed strong correlations. Of 5 samples with MMR loss for which PD-L1 was available, 1 (20%) had PD-L1 ≥1; one of the CDK12 samples had PD-L1 ≥1 (33%). 0/6 BRCA2 mutated biopsies expressed PD-L1 (0%). Based on univariate analysis, PD-L1 expression [HR: 1.75 (1.00;3.06), p=0.045], high GEP score [HR: 2.00 (1.18;3.39), p=0.0083] and SOX2 expression [HR: 1.81 (1.12;2.94), p=0.015] were associated with worse overall survival (OS). No other biomarkers associated with OS. Conclusions: PD-L1 IHC expression was detected in 33% of mCRPC patients and associated with high GEP score. Higher PD-L1, GEP, and SOX2 expression were associated with poor prognosis.
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Hermanova I, Zúñiga-García P, Caro-Maldonado A, Fernandez-Ruiz S, Salvador F, Martín-Martín N, Zabala-Letona A, Nuñez-Olle M, Torrano V, Camacho L, Lizcano JM, Talamillo A, Carreira S, Gurel B, Cortazar AR, Guiu M, López JI, Martinez-Romero A, Astobiza I, Valcarcel-Jimenez L, Lorente M, Arruabarrena-Aristorena A, Velasco G, Gomez-Muñoz A, Suárez-Cabrera C, Lodewijk I, Flores JM, Sutherland JD, Barrio R, de Bono JS, Paramio JM, Trka J, Graupera M, Gomis RR, Carracedo A. Genetic manipulation of LKB1 elicits lethal metastatic prostate cancer. J Exp Med 2021; 217:151590. [PMID: 32219437 PMCID: PMC7971141 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20191787] [Citation(s) in RCA: 14] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/23/2019] [Revised: 12/16/2019] [Accepted: 02/06/2020] [Indexed: 12/31/2022] Open
Abstract
Gene dosage is a key defining factor to understand cancer pathogenesis and progression, which requires the development of experimental models that aid better deconstruction of the disease. Here, we model an aggressive form of prostate cancer and show the unconventional association of LKB1 dosage to prostate tumorigenesis. Whereas loss of Lkb1 alone in the murine prostate epithelium was inconsequential for tumorigenesis, its combination with an oncogenic insult, illustrated by Pten heterozygosity, elicited lethal metastatic prostate cancer. Despite the low frequency of LKB1 deletion in patients, this event was significantly enriched in lung metastasis. Modeling the role of LKB1 in cellular systems revealed that the residual activity retained in a reported kinase-dead form, LKB1K78I, was sufficient to hamper tumor aggressiveness and metastatic dissemination. Our data suggest that prostate cells can function normally with low activity of LKB1, whereas its complete absence influences prostate cancer pathogenesis and dissemination.
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Paschalis A, Welti J, Neeb AJ, Yuan W, Figueiredo I, Pereira R, Ferreira A, Riisnaes R, Rodrigues DN, Jiménez-Vacas JM, Kim S, Uo T, Micco PD, Tumber A, Islam MS, Moesser MA, Abboud M, Kawamura A, Gurel B, Christova R, Gil VS, Buroni L, Crespo M, Miranda S, Lambros MB, Carreira S, Tunariu N, Alimonti A, Al-Lazikani B, Schofield CJ, Plymate SR, Sharp A, de Bono JS. JMJD6 Is a Druggable Oxygenase That Regulates AR-V7 Expression in Prostate Cancer. Cancer Res 2021; 81:1087-1100. [PMID: 33822745 PMCID: PMC8025710 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-20-1807] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/28/2020] [Revised: 09/07/2020] [Accepted: 12/02/2020] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Endocrine resistance (EnR) in advanced prostate cancer is fatal. EnR can be mediated by androgen receptor (AR) splice variants, with AR splice variant 7 (AR-V7) arguably the most clinically important variant. In this study, we determined proteins key to generating AR-V7, validated our findings using clinical samples, and studied splicing regulatory mechanisms in prostate cancer models. Triangulation studies identified JMJD6 as a key regulator of AR-V7, as evidenced by its upregulation with in vitro EnR, its downregulation alongside AR-V7 by bromodomain inhibition, and its identification as a top hit of a targeted siRNA screen of spliceosome-related genes. JMJD6 protein levels increased (P < 0.001) with castration resistance and were associated with higher AR-V7 levels and shorter survival (P = 0.048). JMJD6 knockdown reduced prostate cancer cell growth, AR-V7 levels, and recruitment of U2AF65 to AR pre-mRNA. Mutagenesis studies suggested that JMJD6 activity is key to the generation of AR-V7, with the catalytic machinery residing within a druggable pocket. Taken together, these data highlight the relationship between JMJD6 and AR-V7 in advanced prostate cancer and support further evaluation of JMJD6 as a therapeutic target in this disease. SIGNIFICANCE: This study identifies JMJD6 as being critical for the generation of AR-V7 in prostate cancer, where it may serve as a tractable target for therapeutic intervention.
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Liang Y, Jeganathan S, Marastoni S, Sharp A, Figueiredo I, Marcellus R, Mawson A, Shalev Z, Pesic A, Sweet J, Guo H, Uehling D, Gurel B, Neeb A, He HH, Montgomery B, Koritzinsky M, Oakes S, de Bono JS, Gleave M, Zoubeidi A, Wouters BG, Joshua AM. Emergence of Enzalutamide Resistance in Prostate Cancer is Associated with BCL-2 and IKKB Dependencies. Clin Cancer Res 2021; 27:2340-2351. [PMID: 33542074 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-20-3260] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/03/2020] [Revised: 12/23/2020] [Accepted: 02/02/2021] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
PURPOSE Although enzalutamide (ENZ) has been widely used to treat de novo or castration-resistant metastatic prostate cancer, resistance develops and disease progression is ultimately inevitable. There are currently no approved targeted drugs to specifically delay or overcome ENZ resistance. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN We selected several ENZ-resistant cell lines that replicated clinical characteristics of the majority of patients with ENZ-resistant disease. A high-throughput pharmacologic screen was utilized to identify compounds with greater cytotoxic effect for ENZ-resistant cell lines, compared with parental ENZ-sensitive cells. We validated the potential hits in vitro and in vivo, and used knockdown and overexpression assays to study the dependencies in ENZ-resistant prostate cancer. RESULTS ABT199 (BCL-2 inhibitor) and IMD0354 (IKKB inhibitor) were identified as potent and selective inhibitors of cell viability in ENZ-resistant cell lines in vitro and in vivo which were further validated using loss-of-function assays of BCL-2 and IKKB. Notably, we observed that overexpression of BCL-2 and IKKB in ENZ-sensitive cell lines was sufficient for the emergence of ENZ resistance. In addition, we confirmed that BCL-2 or IKKB inhibitors suppressed the development of ENZ resistance in xenografts. However, validation of both BCL-2 and IKKB in matched castration-sensitive/resistant clinical samples showed that, concurrent with the development of ENZ/abiraterone resistance in patients, only the protein levels of IKKB were increased. CONCLUSIONS Our findings identify BCL-2 and IKKB dependencies in clinically relevant ENZ-resistant prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo, but indicate that IKKB upregulation appears to have greater relevance to the progression of human castrate-resistant prostate cancer.
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Guo C, Crespo M, Gurel B, Dolling D, Rekowski J, Sharp A, Petremolo A, Sumanasuriya S, Rodrigues DN, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Figueiredo I, Mehra N, Lambros MB, Neeb A, Gil V, Terstappen L, Alimonti A, Drake CG, Yuan W, de Bono JS. Abstract PO003: CD38 in the advanced prostate cancer. Cancer Immunol Res 2021. [DOI: 10.1158/2326-6074.tumimm20-po003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: CD38, an ecto-enzyme involved in adenosine synthesis, is implicated in tumor immune evasion. Its expression and role in the prostate tumor microenvironment (TME) has not been fully elucidated. Main objectives: To determine whether CD38 is associated with prostate cancer (PC) immune evasion, to characterize CD38 expression on PC epithelial cells and tumor infiltrating immune cells (TIICs) as tumors progress from castration-sensitive PC (CSPC) to metastatic castration-resistant PC (mCRPC), and to determine the association between CD38+ TIICs and survival.
Methods: Data from 159 mCRPC transcriptomes from the Stand Up To Cancer/Prostate Cancer Foundation cohort were analyzed for associations between CD38 and 200 cell signaling pathways, an adenosine signature and T cell exhaustion signatures. CD38 protein expression on tumor epithelial cells and TIICs was scored using validated immunohistochemistry (IHC) assays on 51 treatment-naïve CSPC biopsies and matching, same-patient mCRPC biopsies obtained between 2016-2018 from men treated at The Royal Marsden Hospital. To characterize CD38+ TIICs, CD38 co-expression with immune cell surface markers for T cells (CD3), B cells (CD19, CD20, CD138, CD79a), and myeloid cells (CD11b, CD15, CD33) was determined by dual-color IHC or multiplex immunofluorescence. The change in CD38+ TIICs density from CSPC to mCRCP was assessed by negative binomial regression and the associations between CD38+ TIIC density and survival were studied using Kaplan-Meier methods, Cox regression and the log-rank test.
Results: Unbiased transcriptome analyses showed that CD38 mRNA expression in mCRPC was associated with upregulated immune signaling pathways, with the ten pathways showing the strongest evidence of association (all P < 1 × 10^-10) with CD38 mRNA expression all being immunomodulatory. CD38 expression was associated with IL-23 signaling (P < 1 × 10^-10), a myeloid suppressor cell-derived mediator of endocrine resistance, as well as immunosuppressive adenosine signaling (P < 1 × 10^-8) and T cell exhaustion signatures (P < 1 × 10^-10). CD38 protein was largely absent from tumor epithelial cells (7.7%). CD38 was expressed by phenotypically diverse TIICs. CD38+ TIICs co-expressed myeloid cell surface markers (CD33, CD15), B cell surface markers (CD19, CD20, CD79a, CD138), and the T cell surface marker (CD3). CD38+ TIIC density increased as tumors progressed from CSPC to CRPC (negative binomial regression, P = 0.03). CSPC and CRPC with higher CD38+ TIIC density (dichotomized based on the median; > 1.5 cells/mm^2) were associated with shorter overall survival from the time of PC diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.89; 95% CI: 1.02-3.50) and the time of mCRPC biopsy (HR: 2.14; 95% CI: 1.15-4.00), respectively.
Conclusion: CD38 is expressed by diverse TIICs in the prostate TME and was associated with potential mechanisms of immune evasion. CD38 expression may serve as a potential prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target in PC aimed at overcoming PC immunoresistance.
Citation Format: Christina Guo, Mateus Crespo, Bora Gurel, David Dolling, Jan Rekowski, Adam Sharp, Antonella Petremolo, Semini Sumanasuriya, Daniel N. Rodrigues, Ana Ferreira, Rita Pereira, Ines Figueiredo, Niven Mehra, Maryou B.K. Lambros, Antje Neeb, Veronica Gil, Leon Terstappen, Andrea Alimonti, Charles G. Drake, Wei Yuan, Johann S. de Bono. CD38 in the advanced prostate cancer [abstract]. In: Abstracts: AACR Virtual Special Conference: Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy; 2020 Oct 19-20. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2021;9(2 Suppl):Abstract nr PO003.
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Neeb A, Herranz N, Arce-Gallego S, Miranda S, Buroni L, Yuan W, Athie A, Casals T, Carmichael J, Rodrigues DN, Gurel B, Rescigno P, Rekowski J, Welti J, Riisnaes R, Gil V, Ning J, Wagner V, Casanova-Salas I, Cordoba S, Castro N, Fenor de la Maza MD, Seed G, Chandran K, Ferreira A, Figueiredo I, Bertan C, Bianchini D, Aversa C, Paschalis A, Gonzalez M, Morales-Barrera R, Suarez C, Carles J, Swain A, Sharp A, Gil J, Serra V, Lord C, Carreira S, Mateo J, de Bono JS. Advanced Prostate Cancer with ATM Loss: PARP and ATR Inhibitors. Eur Urol 2021; 79:200-211. [PMID: 33176972 DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2020.10.029] [Citation(s) in RCA: 67] [Impact Index Per Article: 22.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/22/2020] [Accepted: 10/18/2020] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Deleterious ATM alterations are found in metastatic prostate cancer (PC); PARP inhibition has antitumour activity against this subset, but only some ATM loss PCs respond. OBJECTIVE To characterise ATM-deficient lethal PC and to study synthetic lethal therapeutic strategies for this subset. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We studied advanced PC biopsies using validated immunohistochemical (IHC) and next-generation sequencing (NGS) assays. In vitro cell line models modified using CRISPR-Cas9 to impair ATM function were generated and used in drug-sensitivity and functional assays, with validation in a patient-derived model. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ATM expression by IHC was correlated with clinical outcome using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank test; sensitivity to different drug combinations was assessed in the preclinical models. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS Overall, we detected ATM IHC loss in 68/631 (11%) PC patients in at least one biopsy, with synchronous and metachronous intrapatient heterogeneity; 46/71 (65%) biopsies with ATM loss had ATM mutations or deletions by NGS. ATM IHC loss was not associated with worse outcome from advanced disease, but ATM loss was associated with increased genomic instability (NtAI:number of subchromosomal regions with allelic imbalance extending to the telomere, p = 0.005; large-scale transitions, p = 0.05). In vitro, ATM loss PC models were sensitive to ATR inhibition, but had variable sensitivity to PARP inhibition; superior antitumour activity was seen with combined PARP and ATR inhibition in these models. CONCLUSIONS ATM loss in PC is not always detected by targeted NGS, associates with genomic instability, and is most sensitive to combined ATR and PARP inhibition. PATIENT SUMMARY Of aggressive prostate cancers, 10% lose the DNA repair gene ATM; this loss may identify a distinct prostate cancer subtype that is most sensitive to the combination of oral drugs targeting PARP and ATR.
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Rescigno P, Gurel B, Pereira R, Crespo M, Rekowski J, Rediti M, Barrero M, Mateo J, Bianchini D, Messina C, Fenor de la Maza MD, Chandran K, Carmichael J, Guo C, Paschalis A, Sharp A, Seed G, Figueiredo I, Lambros M, Miranda S, Ferreira A, Bertan C, Riisnaes R, Porta N, Yuan W, Carreira S, de Bono JS. Characterizing CDK12-Mutated Prostate Cancers. Clin Cancer Res 2021; 27:566-574. [PMID: 32988971 PMCID: PMC7855716 DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-20-2371] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 14.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/24/2020] [Revised: 08/17/2020] [Accepted: 09/23/2020] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
PURPOSE Cyclin-dependent kinase 12 (CDK12) aberrations have been reported as a biomarker of response to immunotherapy for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Herein, we characterize CDK12-mutated mCRPC, presenting clinical, genomic, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) data. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN Patients with mCRPC consented to the molecular analyses of diagnostic and mCRPC biopsies. Genomic analyses involved targeted next-generation (MiSeq; Illumina) and exome sequencing (NovaSeq; Illumina). TILs were assessed by validated immunocytochemistry coupled with deep learning-based artificial intelligence analyses including multiplex immunofluorescence assays for CD4, CD8, and FOXP3 evaluating TIL subsets. The control group comprised a randomly selected mCRPC cohort with sequencing and clinical data available. RESULTS Biopsies from 913 patients underwent targeted sequencing between February 2015 and October 2019. Forty-three patients (4.7%) had tumors with CDK12 alterations. CDK12-altered cancers had distinctive features, with some revealing high chromosomal break numbers in exome sequencing. Biallelic CDK12-aberrant mCRPCs had shorter overall survival from diagnosis than controls [5.1 years (95% confidence interval (CI), 4.0-7.9) vs. 6.4 years (95% CI, 5.7-7.8); hazard ratio (HR), 1.65 (95% CI, 1.07-2.53); P = 0.02]. Median intratumoral CD3+ cell density was higher in CDK12 cancers, although this was not statistically significant (203.7 vs. 86.7 cells/mm2; P = 0.07). This infiltrate primarily comprised of CD4+FOXP3- cells (50.5 vs. 6.2 cells/mm2; P < 0.0001), where high counts tended to be associated with worse survival from diagnosis (HR, 1.64; 95% CI, 0.95-2.84; P = 0.077) in the overall population. CONCLUSIONS CDK12-altered mCRPCs have worse prognosis, with these tumors surprisingly being primarily enriched for CD4+FOXP3- cells that seem to associate with worse outcome and may be immunosuppressive.See related commentary by Lotan and Antonarakis, p. 380.
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Welti J, Sharp A, Brooks N, Yuan W, McNair C, Chand SN, Pal A, Figueiredo I, Riisnaes R, Gurel B, Rekowski J, Bogdan D, West W, Young B, Raja M, Prosser A, Lane J, Thomson S, Worthington J, Onions S, Shannon J, Paoletta S, Brown R, Smyth D, Harbottle GW, Gil VS, Miranda S, Crespo M, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Tunariu N, Carreira S, Neeb AJ, Ning J, Swain A, Taddei D, Schiewer MJ, Knudsen KE, Pegg N, de Bono JS. Targeting the p300/CBP Axis in Lethal Prostate Cancer. Cancer Discov 2021; 11:1118-1137. [PMID: 33431496 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.cd-20-0751] [Citation(s) in RCA: 130] [Impact Index Per Article: 43.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/27/2020] [Revised: 10/16/2020] [Accepted: 12/11/2020] [Indexed: 12/19/2022]
Abstract
Resistance to androgen receptor (AR) blockade in castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) is associated with sustained AR signaling, including through alternative splicing of AR (AR-SV). Inhibitors of transcriptional coactivators that regulate AR activity, including the paralog histone acetyltransferase proteins p300 and CBP, are attractive therapeutic targets for lethal prostate cancer. Herein, we validate targeting p300/CBP as a therapeutic strategy for lethal prostate cancer and describe CCS1477, a novel small-molecule inhibitor of the p300/CBP conserved bromodomain. We show that CCS1477 inhibits cell proliferation in prostate cancer cell lines and decreases AR- and C-MYC-regulated gene expression. In AR-SV-driven models, CCS1477 has antitumor activity, regulating AR and C-MYC signaling. Early clinical studies suggest that CCS1477 modulates KLK3 blood levels and regulates CRPC biopsy biomarker expression. Overall, CCS1477 shows promise for the treatment of patients with advanced prostate cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: Treating CRPC remains challenging due to persistent AR signaling. Inhibiting transcriptional AR coactivators is an attractive therapeutic strategy. CCS1477, an inhibitor of p300/CBP, inhibits growth and AR activity in CRPC models, and can affect metastatic CRPC target expression in serial clinical biopsies.See related commentary by Rasool et al., p. 1011.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 995.
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Biondo A, Pal A, Riisnaes R, Shinde R, Tiu C, Lockie F, Baker C, Bertan C, Crespo M, Ferreira A, Pereira R, Figueiredo I, Miranda S, Gurel B, Carreira S, Banerji U, de Bono J, Lopez J, Tunariu N, Minchom A. Research Related Tumour Biopsies in Early-Phase Trials with Simultaneous Molecular Characterisation - a Single Unit Experience. Cancer Treat Res Commun 2021; 27:100309. [PMID: 33549985 DOI: 10.1016/j.ctarc.2021.100309] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/03/2020] [Revised: 01/07/2021] [Accepted: 01/08/2021] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
Early-phase cancer clinical trials are becoming increasingly accessible for patients with advanced cancer who have exhausted standard treatment options and later phase trial options. Many of these trials mandate research tissue biopsies. Research biopsies have been perceived as ethically fraught due to the perception of potential coercion of vulnerable human subjects. We performed an audit of two years of practice to assess the safety of ultrasound (US)-guided research biopsies, and to look at the yield of a simultaneous tumour next-generation sequencing (NGS) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) molecular characterisation programme. We show that in our institution, US-guided research biopsies were safe, produced adequate tumour content and in a selected subset who underwent in-house NGS sequencing, showed a high rate of actionable mutations with 30% having a Tier 1 variant. Nevertheless, these research biopsies may only provide direct benefit for a minority of patients and we conclude with a reflection on the importance of obtaining truly informed consent.
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Tiu C, Tzankov A, Plummer R, Rulach R, Vivanco I, Mulholland P, Gurel B, Figueiredo I, Haris NM, Anderson S, Bachmann F, Engelhardt M, Kaindl T, Lane H, Litherland K, Pognan C, Berezowska S, Evans J, Kristeleit R, Lopez J. 382P The potential utility of end-binding protein 1 (EB1) as response-predictive biomarker for lisavanbulin: Final results from a phase I study of lisavanbulin (BAL101553) in adult patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM). Ann Oncol 2020. [DOI: 10.1016/j.annonc.2020.08.491] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022] Open
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Gurel B, Rescigno P, Yuan W, Pereira R, Crespo M, Rediti M, Figueiredo I, Barrero M, Bianchini D, Fenor de la Maza MD, Chandran K, Carmichael J, Paschalis A, Sharp A, Seed G, Riisnaes R, Bertan C, Carreira S, De Bono JS. Abstract LB-075: CDK12-mutated lethal prostate cancers: How hot are these tumors. Cancer Res 2020. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2020-lb-075] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Genomic analyses describing the molecular landscape of primary prostate cancer (PCa) and metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) have identified recurrent CDK12 alterations in 2-4% of primary PCa and 4-11% of mCRPC. These aberrations, as well as high lymphocyte tumor infiltration, could be clinically relevant as putative biomarkers of response to immunotherapies. However, there are few studies looking into whether CDK12 biallelic mutant cases are immune ‘hot'. Here, we describe a cohort of patients with CDK12 aberration and studied the tumor infiltration of those cancers.
Methods: Patients with mCRPC and available diagnostic archival and/or CRPC tumor samples were evaluated. Mutation analysis involved custom designed targeted sequencing on MiSeq sequencer. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was assessed for the CDK12 cases from exome sequencing using ASCAT, which include single copy lost or copy neutral LOH. Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes were assessed initially with CD3 IHC, using a deep learning-based AI analysis approach. We then subtyped the TILs using a multiplex IF approach, classifying lymphocytes using CD4, CD8 and FOXP3 positivity.
Results: Overall 913 samples (between Feb/15 and Oct/19) were sequenced by targeted NGS, 42 patients presented with pathogenic alterations in CDK12 (4.6%), 27 had bi-allelic alterations, 14 mono-allelic, 1 likely biallelic. In these cases, we identified 39 frameshift alterations, 10 missense mutations mainly involving the kinase domain; with 5 having concomitant LOH. One case showed deep deletion of CDK12 and five presented with additional aberrations in other DNA repair related genes. CDK12 biallelic alterations were present in all 3 cases with both diagnostic and matched mCRPC samples available. We studied T cell infiltration in 100 (23 CDK12 biallelic alterations, 7 monoallelic, 70 controls) samples selected from within the initial targeted NGS cohort. Median intratumoral CD3+ cell density was significantly higher in CDK12 biallelic loss samples compared to matched controls in diagnostic biopsies (271.4 vs 104.683 cells/mm2, p=0.026). A similar trend was seen in mCRPC samples (142.130 vs 51.75 cells/mm2, p=0.36). Intratumoral CD4+ cell infiltration was again significantly higher in CDK12 biallelic loss samples compared to controls (98.864 vs 6.188 cells/mm2, p=0.014).
Conclusions: In our analysis we show that a proportion of mCRPC patients harbor defects in CDK12, these are often alterations involving both alleles, likely present from the time of diagnosis. A majority of these CDK12 altered cancers has high CD3 infiltration compared to controls. We envision that these CDK12 aberrant ‘hot' tumors could represent a subset of mCRPC likely to respond to immune-checkpoint inhibition.
Citation Format: Bora Gurel, Pasquale Rescigno, Wei Yuan, Rita Pereira, Mateus Crespo, Mattia Rediti, Ines Figueiredo, Maialen Barrero, Diletta Bianchini, Maria D. Fenor de la Maza, Khobe Chandran, Juliet Carmichael, Alec Paschalis, Adam Sharp, George Seed, Ruth Riisnaes, Claudia Bertan, Suzanne Carreira, Johann S. De Bono. CDK12-mutated lethal prostate cancers: How hot are these tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-075.
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Papadatos-Pastos D, Pal A, Akay M, Ameratunga M, Mithra S, Ang JE, Levva S, Caldwell R, Riisnaes R, Crespo M, Yuan W, Seed G, Gurel B, Figueiredo I, Pereira R, Miranda S, Ferreira A, Carreira S, Bertan C, Baker C, Morilla R, Brown R, Masrour N, Prout T, Zachariou A, Turner A, Parmar M, Van de Velde M, Jenkins B, Yap C, Tunariu N, Banerji U, Lopez J, Minchom A, De Bono J. Abstract CT129: HyPeR: A phase 1, dose escalation and expansion trial of guadecitabine (SGI-110), a second-generation hypomethylating agent in combination with pembrolizumab (MK3475) in patients with refractory solid tumors. Cancer Res 2020. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2020-ct129] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Methylation is reported to support cancer immune tolerance. We conducted a phase 1 dose-escalation trial [NCT02998567] of combination guadecitabine (G; DNA hypomethylating agent) and pembrolizumab (P) in patients (pts) with advanced cancers. We hypothesized that G can normalize the expression of epigenetically suppressed immune genes, increase interferon producing tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), and enhance the anticancer activity of P. Methods: In dose escalation (Es), pts received G (45 mg/m2 or 30 mg/m2, administered SC on days 1-4) with P (200 mg, administered IV starting from cycle 2 onwards) as outpatient Q3W; in expansion (Ex), the RP2D of G (30 mg/m2) with P (200 mg) Q3W was administered. Pre-treatment and on-treatment tumor biopsies were evaluated for PD-L1 expression, tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, gene expression by RNAseq and methylome studies. Longitudinal analyses of peripheral blood CD3, CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes by flow cytometry were performed. Results: Overall, 34 pts (Es, n = 14; Ex, n = 20) were evaluable for safety. The most common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) were neutropenia (n = 21), fatigue (n = 6) and thrombocytopenia (n = 3), diarrhea (n = 2). G3+ TRAEs were neutropenia (n = 14), febrile neutropenia (n = 4), raised ALP (n = 1), raised AST (n=1), colitis (n = 1), diarrhoea (n = 1) and lung infection (n = 1). Two DLTs (neutropenia, febrile neutropenia) were reported at G 45mg/m2 with none reported at G 30mg/m2. There were no treatment-related deaths. In total, 28 pts (Es, n = 12; Ex, n = 16) were evaluable for antitumor activity studies (≥2 scans); ORR (CR+PR) and DCR (CR+PR+SD) were 3% and 57%; 10/15 pts with non-small cell lung cancer (13 pts resistant/refractory to PD-1/PD-L1 targeting agents) were evaluable, with a DCR of 80% and 5 pts having DCR > 6 months with 8 pts remaining on study treatment. Overall, 25 paired biopsies were obtained. Using LINE1 sequences to study global methylation, both tumor biopsies and peripheral blood showed reduced methylation post-G treatment. Preliminary data on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes assessed by multicolor immunofluorescence in 9 paired biopsies showed a numerical increase in median values of T-helper (CD4+FOXP3-) (10.20 to 19.70, p = 0.5469), T-regulatory (CD4+FOXP3+) (5.1 to 6.7, p=0.8438), and T-cytotoxic (CD8+) cell densities (2.7 to 7.4, p=0.6523) . Comparing with matched pre-treatment, on treatment tumor had numerical increases in interferon alpha and gamma response pathway activation in serial biopsy RNAseq analyses but did not reach significance. Conclusions: G plus P resulted in no unexpected toxicities with evidence suggestive of biological and anti-cancer activity.
Citation Format: Dionysis Papadatos-Pastos, Abhijit Pal, Melek Akay, Malaka Ameratunga, Sanjena Mithra, Joo-Ern Ang, Sofia Levva, Reece Caldwell, Ruth Riisnaes, Mateus Crespo, Wei Yuan, George Seed, Bora Gurel, Ines Figueiredo, Rita Pereira, Susana Miranda, Anna Ferreira, Suzanne Carreira, Claudia Bertan, Chloe Baker, Ricardo Morilla, Robert Brown, Nahal Masrour, Toby Prout, Anna Zachariou, Alison Turner, Mona Parmar, Mark Van de Velde, Ben Jenkins, Christina Yap, Nina Tunariu, Udai Banerji, Juanita Lopez, Anna Minchom, Johann De Bono. HyPeR: A phase 1, dose escalation and expansion trial of guadecitabine (SGI-110), a second-generation hypomethylating agent in combination with pembrolizumab (MK3475) in patients with refractory solid tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr CT129.
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Lopez JS, Biondo A, Tiu C, Scaranti M, Ameratunga M, Zachariou A, Turner A, Tunariu N, Prout T, Parmar M, Badham H, Swales K, Yuan W, Morilla R, Crespo M, Daly R, Figueiredo I, Gurel B, Pereira R, Riisnaes R, Vivanco I, Minchom A, Jenkins B, Yap C, Banerji U, De Bono J. Abstract CT140: Proof-of-concept evidence of immune modulation by blockade of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT signaling pathway in the phase I dose escalation study of Ipatasertib (Ipa) in combination with atezolizumab (A) in patients (pts) with advanced solid tumors (Ice-CAP). Cancer Res 2020. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2020-ct140] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Hyperactivation of the PI3K/AKT pathway correlates with impaired anti-tumor responses, including reduced T cell infiltration into tumor, and reduced efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors. Blockade of this pathway synergizes with PD-L1/PD-1 axis blockade preclinically.
Methods: This Phase I clinical trial (NCT03673787) assessed the safety, pharmacodynamic, and preliminary clinical activity of Ipa (200mg or 400mg OD) given in combination with A 1200mg q3 wk in refractory pts. Serial paired blood and tumor samples were analysed to interrogate the effect of Ipa on the tumor micro-environment and host immune system prior to the addition of the immune check point inhibitor, A.
Results: 18 adult pts were treated in dose escalation. Median age 49 yrs. All pts had ECOG PS 0-1 and median 7 prior therapies. Most common TRAEs (>15%) were mild Gr1-2 diarrhea (56%), rash (50%), fatigue (33%), nausea (33%), raised ALT/AST (33%), headache (28%) and arthralgia (22%). 1 pt had G2 systemic immune activation; 2 pts had G3 rash, both rapidly reversible. 1 DLT of G3 raised ALT seen at 200mg (1 DLT/9 evaluable pts) but none at 400mg (0 DLT/6). Of 14 RECIST evaluable patients, there were 2 confirmed PRs, and 5 SD (clinical benefit rate 50%). Reductions of CD4+FOXP3+ Tregs in tumor microenvironment were seen after 2wks of single agent Ipa, regardless of PIK3/AKT somatic mutation status (Table 1). Responding pts had a >400% median increase in intra-tumoral CD8+ Teff cell infiltration, effectively switching from a desert phenotype to an inflamed phenotype. Paired changes in FACS, transcriptome and cytokine will also be presented.Conclusions: The RP2D of Ipa 400mg OD combination with A was well tolerated with early efficacy signals. Further biomarker work is ongoing and will be evaluated in expansion cohorts.
Table 1:Changes in immune cell populations as assessed by multicolour Immunofluorescence in paired biopsies of breast/gynae patients, % change in cell number/mm2 from baseline (median [min,max$])&Post 2 weeks single agent Ipatasertib(n=9)Post 1 cycle of combination Ipatasertib and Atezolizumab(n=7)CD4+FOXP3+Tregs cellsCD 8+ Teff cellsCD4+FOXP3+Tregs cellsCD 8+ Teff cellsIntra-tumourstromaIntra-tumourstromaIntra-tumourstromaIntra-tumourstromaAll patients-23.9*[-89.7, BL0]-30.0*[-91.6, BL0]-37.7*[-84.4, -24.5]-28.4[-92.4, 259.8]335.9[-44.0,BL0]45.4[-51.0, BL0]59.6[-60.6,493.3]64.7[-51.7,293.3]Stratified by somatic PI3K/AKT/PTEN mutational statusPathogenic mutations (mt)11.1[-82.2, BL0]#-10.7[-91.6, BL0]Φnsnsnsns-30.5[-60.6,-0.5]11.3[-51.7,50.0]Wildtype (wt)-63.1[-89.7,19.0]#-47.5[-77.0,11.1]Φnsnsnsns426.5[59.6,493.3]126.7[79.4,293.3]Stratified by responseResponders (PR + SD>4 cycles). 1 ER+ HER2+ breast cancer (wt), 1 ER+ HER2- breast cancer (wt)459.9[426.5,493.3]@103.1[79.4,126.7]Non-responders (PD at 4 cycles) 1 cervical cancer, 4 ER+ breast cancer-0.5[-60.6, 59.6]@30.6[-51.7,293.3]*significant change (p≤0.05; Wilcoxon sign-rank test) from baseline, $maximum values denoted by BL0indicate that the baseline value was zero, and so percentage change from baseline is not defined. For the analysis, the baseline value has been replaced by a nominal value of 0.1 so that a large percentage increase is associated with these cases. Note that these large percentage increases do not affect the non-parametric statistical tests used.#no significant difference in distribution of reduction in intra-tumoural CD4+ FOXP3+Tregsbetween pts with pathogenic mutations in PI3K/AKT and those without (p=0.30; Wilcoxon rank-sum test)Φno significant difference in distribution of reduction in stromal CD4+FOXP3+Tregsbetween pts with pathogenic mutations in PI3K/AKT and those without (p=0.44; Wilcoxon rank-sum test) @ difference between responders and non-responders p=0.083; Wilcoxon rank-sum test)mt pathogenic mutations in PI3K/AKT and PTEN as per COSMIC database present in tumour or PTEN loss by IHC. wt no pathogenic mutations in PI3K/AKT and PTEN as per COSMIC database detected in tumour and intact PTEN expression by IHC. &exploratory analyses with no adjustment for multiple testing
Citation Format: Juanita S. Lopez, Andrea Biondo, Crescens Tiu, Mariana Scaranti, Malaka Ameratunga, Anna Zachariou, Alison Turner, Nina Tunariu, Toby Prout, Mona Parmar, Hannah Badham, Karen Swales, Wei Yuan, Ricardo Morilla, Mateus Crespo, Rob Daly, Ines Figueiredo, Bora Gurel, Rita Pereira, Ruth Riisnaes, Igor Vivanco, Anna Minchom, Ben Jenkins, Christina Yap, Udai Banerji, Johann De Bono. Proof-of-concept evidence of immune modulation by blockade of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT signaling pathway in the phase I dose escalation study of Ipatasertib (Ipa) in combination with atezolizumab (A) in patients (pts) with advanced solid tumors (Ice-CAP) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr CT140.
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Shinde R, Terbuch A, Little M, Caldwell R, Kurup R, Riisnaes R, Crespo M, Ruddle R, Gurel B, Stewart A, King J, Parmar M, Turner A, Raynaud F, Mahmud M, Yap C, Pachter JA, Mills GB, Minchom A, Lopez J, Banerjee SN, de Bono JS, Krebs M, Banerji U. Abstract CT143: Phase I study of the combination of a RAF-MEK inhibitor CH5126766 and FAK inhibitor defactinib in an intermittent dosing schedule with expansions inKRASmutant cancers. Tumour Biol 2020. [DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2020-ct143] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
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de Bono JS, Guo C, Gurel B, De Marzo AM, Sfanos KS, Mani RS, Gil J, Drake CG, Alimonti A. Prostate carcinogenesis: inflammatory storms. Nat Rev Cancer 2020; 20:455-469. [PMID: 32546840 DOI: 10.1038/s41568-020-0267-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 109] [Impact Index Per Article: 27.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Accepted: 04/24/2020] [Indexed: 02/06/2023]
Abstract
Prostate cancer is a major cause of cancer morbidity and mortality. Intra-prostatic inflammation is a risk factor for prostate carcinogenesis, with diet, chemical injury and an altered microbiome being causally implicated. Intra-prostatic inflammatory cell recruitment and expansion can ultimately promote DNA double-strand breaks and androgen receptor activation in prostate epithelial cells. The activation of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype fuels further 'inflammatory storms', with free radicals leading to further DNA damage. This drives the overexpression of DNA repair and tumour suppressor genes, rendering these genes susceptible to mutagenic insults, with carcinogenesis accelerated by germline DNA repair gene defects. We provide updates on recent advances in elucidating prostate carcinogenesis and explore novel therapeutic and prevention strategies harnessing these discoveries.
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