Belfer Center for Applied Cancer Science, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.
Janssen, Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, Spring House, Pennsylvania.
Cancer Immunol Res. 2019 Sep;7(9):1457-1471. doi: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-18-0595. Epub 2019 Jul 22.
The success of targeted or immune therapies is often hampered by the emergence of resistance and/or clinical benefit in only a subset of patients. We hypothesized that combining targeted therapy with immune modulation would show enhanced antitumor responses. Here, we explored the combination potential of erdafitinib, a fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitor under clinical development, with PD-1 blockade in an autochthonous FGFR2/p53 lung cancer mouse model. Erdafitinib monotherapy treatment resulted in substantial tumor control but no significant survival benefit. Although anti-PD-1 alone was ineffective, the erdafitinib and anti-PD-1 combination induced significant tumor regression and improved survival. For both erdafitinib monotherapy and combination treatments, tumor control was accompanied by tumor-intrinsic, FGFR pathway inhibition, increased T-cell infiltration, decreased regulatory T cells, and downregulation of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells. These effects were not observed in a KRAS-mutant genetically engineered mouse model, which is insensitive to FGFR inhibition, indicating that the immune changes mediated by erdafitinib may be initiated as a consequence of tumor cell killing. A decreased fraction of tumor-associated macrophages also occurred but only in combination-treated tumors. Treatment with erdafitinib decreased T-cell receptor (TCR) clonality, reflecting a broadening of the TCR repertoire induced by tumor cell death, whereas combination with anti-PD-1 led to increased TCR clonality, suggesting a more focused antitumor T-cell response. Our results showed that the combination of erdafitinib and anti-PD-1 drives expansion of T-cell clones and immunologic changes in the tumor microenvironment to support enhanced antitumor immunity and survival.
靶向或免疫疗法的成功往往受到阻碍,因为只有一部分患者出现耐药性和/或临床获益。我们假设将靶向治疗与免疫调节相结合会显示出增强的抗肿瘤反应。在这里,我们在一个同源 FGFR2/p53 肺癌小鼠模型中探索了临床开发中的成纤维细胞生长因子受体 (FGFR) 抑制剂 erdafitinib 与 PD-1 阻断的联合潜力。厄达替尼单药治疗导致肿瘤得到了很好的控制,但没有显著的生存获益。虽然单独使用抗 PD-1 无效,但厄达替尼和抗 PD-1 联合治疗可诱导显著的肿瘤消退并提高生存率。对于厄达替尼单药和联合治疗,肿瘤控制伴随着肿瘤内在的 FGFR 通路抑制、T 细胞浸润增加、调节性 T 细胞减少以及肿瘤细胞上 PD-L1 表达下调。这些效应在 KRAS 突变的基因工程小鼠模型中没有观察到,该模型对 FGFR 抑制不敏感,表明厄达替尼介导的免疫变化可能是作为肿瘤细胞杀伤的结果而引发的。还观察到肿瘤相关巨噬细胞的比例降低,但仅在联合治疗的肿瘤中观察到。厄达替尼治疗降低了 T 细胞受体 (TCR) 的克隆性,反映了肿瘤细胞死亡诱导的 TCR 库的拓宽,而与抗 PD-1 联合则导致 TCR 克隆性增加,提示抗肿瘤 T 细胞反应更加集中。我们的结果表明,厄达替尼和抗 PD-1 的联合治疗促进了 T 细胞克隆的扩增和肿瘤微环境中的免疫变化,以支持增强的抗肿瘤免疫力和生存。