Durable Responses to Anti-PD1 and Anti-CTLA4 in a Preclinical Model of Melanoma Displaying Key Immunotherapy Response Biomarkers — Elena Shklovskaya (2022) | RDL Network
Durable Responses to Anti-PD1 and Anti-CTLA4 in a Preclinical Model of Melanoma Displaying Key Immunotherapy Response Biomarkers
Article 2022 en
Authors
ES
Elena Shklovskaya
BP
Bernadette Pedersen
AS
Ashleigh Stewart
Abstract
1 min read
Immunotherapy has transformed the management of patients with advanced melanoma, with five-year overall survival rates reaching 52% for combination immunotherapies blocking the cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA4) and programmed cell death-1 (PD1) immune axes. Yet, our understanding of local and systemic determinants of immunotherapy response and resistance is restrained by the paucity of preclinical models, particularly those for anti-PD1 monotherapy. We have therefore generated a novel murine model of melanoma by integrating key immunotherapy response biomarkers into the model development workflow. The resulting YUMM3.3<sup>UVR</sup>c34 (<i>BrafV600E; Cdkn2a</i>-/-) model demonstrated high mutation burden and response to interferon (IFN)γ, including induced expression of antigen-presenting molecule MHC-I and the principal PD1 ligand PD-L1, consistent with phenotypes of human melanoma biopsies from patients subsequently responding to anti-PD1 monotherapy. Syngeneic immunosufficient mice bearing YUMM3.3<sup>UVR</sup>c34 tumors demonstrated durable responses to anti-PD1, anti-CTLA4, or combined treatment. Immunotherapy responses were associated with early on-treatment changes in the tumor microenvironment and circulating T-cell subsets, and systemic immunological memory underlying protection from tumor recurrence. Local and systemic immunological landscapes associated with immunotherapy response in the YUMM3.3<sup>UVR</sup>c34 melanoma model recapitulate immunotherapy responses observed in melanoma patients and identify discrete immunological mechanisms underlying the durability of responses to anti-PD1 and anti-CTLA4 treatments.
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