Role of Tumor-Infiltrating B Cells in Clinical Outcome of Patients with Melanoma Treated With Dabrafenib Plus Trametinib

Although patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma can experience long-term survival with BRAF- and MEK-targeted agents or immune checkpoint inhibitors over 5 years, resistance develops in most patients. There is a distinct lack of pretherapeutic biomarkers to identify which patients are lik...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical cancer research 2021-08, Vol.27 (16), p.4500-4510
Hauptverfasser: Brase, Jan C, Walter, Robert F H, Savchenko, Alexander, Gusenleitner, Daniel, Garrett, James, Schimming, Tobias, Varaljai, Renata, Castelletti, Deborah, Kim, Ju, Dakappagari, Naveen, Schultz, Ken, Robert, Caroline, Long, Georgina V, Nathan, Paul D, Ribas, Antoni, Flaherty, Keith T, Karaszewska, Boguslawa, Schachter, Jacob, Sucker, Antje, Schmid, Kurt W, Zimmer, Lisa, Livingstone, Elisabeth, Gasal, Eduard, Schadendorf, Dirk, Roesch, Alexander
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma can experience long-term survival with BRAF- and MEK-targeted agents or immune checkpoint inhibitors over 5 years, resistance develops in most patients. There is a distinct lack of pretherapeutic biomarkers to identify which patients are likely to benefit from each therapy type. Most research has focused on the predictive role of T cells in antitumor responses as opposed to B cells. We conducted prespecified exploratory biomarker analysis using gene expression profiling and digital pathology in 146 patients with previously untreated V600-mutant metastatic melanoma from the randomized, phase III COMBI-v trial and treated with dabrafenib plus trametinib who had available tumor specimens from screening. Baseline cell-cycle gene expression signature was associated with progression-free survival ( = 0.007). Patients with high T-cell/low B-cell gene signatures had improved median overall survival (not reached [95% confidence interval (CI), 33.8 months-not reached]) compared with patients with high T-cell/high B-cell signatures (19.1 months; 95% CI, 13.4-38.6 months). Patients with high B-cell signatures had high B-cell infiltration into the tumor compartment, corresponding with decreased MAPK activity and increased expression of immunosuppressive markers. B cells may serve as a potential biomarker to predict clinical outcome in patients with advanced melanoma treated with dabrafenib plus trametinib. As separate studies have shown an opposite effect for B-cell levels and response to immunotherapy, B cells may serve as a potential biomarker to facilitate treatment selection. Further validation in a larger patient cohort is needed.
ISSN:1078-0432
1557-3265
DOI:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-3586