Sia Joseph, D'Souza Criselle, Castle Becky, Huang Yu-Kuan, Aw Yeang Han Xiang, Idrizi Rejhan, Jana Metta, Siva Shankar, Phillips Claire, Neeson Paul
Department of Radiation Oncology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne 3000, Australia.
Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne 3010, Australia.
Clin Transl Radiat Oncol. 2024 Sep 21;49:100863. doi: 10.1016/j.ctro.2024.100863. eCollection 2024 Nov.
Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is highly effective as focal treatment for brain metastases (BrMs), but whether it can promote anti-tumour immune responses that synergise with immunotherapy remains unclear. We investigated this by examining blood samples from a clinical trial for HER2-amplified breast cancer (HER2-BC) BrMs, matched with longitudinal HER2-BC BrM samples resected from the same location in the same patient.
Blood samples from 10 patients taken pre- and 7-14 days post-SRS were analysed by mass and flow cytometry. One patient received pre-operative SRS for a BrM that recurred 7 months after resection, followed by planned re-resection 8 days post-SRS. Pre- and post-SRS tumours from this patient were analysed by bulk RNAseq, multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC), and TCR sequencing.
Monocytes, central memory CD8+ T and regulatory T cells were enriched in blood post-SRS, together with increased MHC-II expression on monocytes, conventional DCs, and monocytic MDSCs. In tumour, SRS upregulated antigen presentation, T cell proliferation and T cell co-stimulation signatures, alongside an influx of tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) and CD4+ T cells. Specifically, TAMs and CD4+ T cells, but not CD8+ T cells, demonstrated spatial co-localisation post-SRS. These TAMs were lowly PD-L1 expressing, but CD4+ T cells showed increased PD-1 expression. A sizeable proportion of T cell clonotypes were retained post-SRS, and four clones demonstrated significant, non-stochastic expansion.
Systemic and local immunological changes in this homogenous patient cohort suggest that SRS may facilitate MHC-II-restricted T cell priming responses involving the monocyte-macrophage lineage and CD4+ T cells, which should be further explored.
立体定向放射外科(SRS)作为脑转移瘤(BrMs)的局部治疗方法非常有效,但它是否能促进与免疫疗法协同作用的抗肿瘤免疫反应仍不清楚。我们通过检测一项针对HER2扩增型乳腺癌(HER2-BC)脑转移瘤的临床试验中的血样,并与从同一患者同一部位切除的纵向HER2-BC脑转移瘤样本进行匹配,来对此进行研究。
对10例患者在SRS治疗前及治疗后7 - 14天采集的血样进行质谱和流式细胞术分析。1例患者因脑转移瘤在切除后7个月复发接受术前SRS治疗,然后在SRS治疗后8天进行计划中的再次切除。对该患者SRS治疗前后的肿瘤进行全转录组RNA测序(bulk RNAseq)、多重免疫组织化学(mIHC)和T细胞受体测序。
SRS治疗后血中单核细胞、中枢记忆性CD8 + T细胞和调节性T细胞增多,同时单核细胞、传统树突状细胞和单核细胞来源的髓系抑制细胞(MDSCs)上的MHC-II表达增加。在肿瘤中,SRS上调了抗原呈递、T细胞增殖和T细胞共刺激特征,同时肿瘤相关巨噬细胞(TAM)和CD4 + T细胞流入。具体而言,TAM和CD4 + T细胞(而非CD8 + T细胞)在SRS治疗后显示出空间共定位。这些TAM低表达PD-L1,但CD4 + T细胞显示PD-1表达增加。相当比例的T细胞克隆型在SRS治疗后得以保留,并且四个克隆显示出显著的、非随机的扩增。
在这个同质患者队列中的全身和局部免疫变化表明,SRS可能促进涉及单核细胞 - 巨噬细胞谱系和CD4 + T细胞的MHC-II限制性T细胞启动反应,这值得进一步探索。