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Genomic predictors of response to PD-1 inhibition in children with germline DNA replication repair deficiency

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2022-01

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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Das, Anirban, Sumedha Sudhaman, Daniel Morgenstern, Ailish Coblentz, Jiil Chung, Simone C. Stone, Noor Alsafwani et al. "Genomic predictors of response to PD-1 inhibition in children with germline DNA replication repair deficiency." Nat Med 28, no. 1 (2022): 125-135. DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01581-6

Abstract

Cancers arising from germline DNA mismatch-repair or polymerase-proofreading deficiencies (MMRD and PPD) in children harbour the highest mutational and microsatellite insertion/deletion (MS-indel) burden in humans. MMRD/PPD cancers are commonly lethal due to inherent resistance to chemo-irradiation. Although immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) have failed to benefit children in previous studies, we hypothesized that hypermutation caused by MMRD and PPD will improve outcomes following ICI in these patients. Using an international consortium registry study, we report on the ICI treatment of 45 progressive/recurrent tumours from 38 patients. Durable objective responses were observed in most patients, culminating in 3-year survival of 41.4%. High mutation burden predicted response for ultra-hypermutant cancers (>100 mutations/Mb) enriched for combined MMRD+PPD, while MS-indels predicted response in MMRD tumours with lower mutation burden (10-100 mutations/Mb). Further, both mechanisms were associated with increased immune infiltration even in “immunologically-cold” tumours such as gliomas, contributing to the favorable response. Pseudo-progression (flare) was common and associated with immune activation in both the tumour microenvironment and systemically. Further, patients with flare continuing ICI treatment achieved durable responses. Our study demonstrates improved survival for patients with tumours not previously known to respond to ICI, including CNS and synchronous cancers, and identifies the dual roles of mutation burden and MS-indels in predicting sustained responses to immunotherapy.

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General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Medicine

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