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TGFβ attenuates tumour response to PD-L1 blockade by contributing to exclusion of T cells.

Sanjeev Mariathasan ,
Shannon J Turley ,
Dorothee Nickles ,
Alessandra Castiglioni ,
Kobe Yuen ,
Yulei Wang ,
Edward E Kadel ,
Hartmut Koeppen ,
Jillian L Astarita ,
Rafael Cubas ,
Suchit Jhunjhunwala ,
Romain Banchereau ,
Yagai Yang ,
Yinghui Guan ,
Cecile Chalouni ,
James Ziai ,
Yasin Şenbabaoğlu ,
Stephen Santoro ,
Daniel Sheinson ,
Jeffrey Hung ,
Jennifer M Giltnane ,
Andrew A Pierce ,
Kathryn Mesh ,
Steve Lianoglou ,
Johannes Riegler ,
Richard A D Carano ,
Pontus Eriksson ,
Mattias Höglund ,
Loan Somarriba ,
Daniel L Halligan ,
Michiel S van der Heijden ,
Yohann Loriot ,
Jonathan E Rosenberg ,
Lawrence Fong ,
Ira Mellman ,
Daniel S Chen ,
Marjorie Green ,
Christina Derleth ,
Gregg D Fine ,
Priti S Hegde ,
Richard Bourgon ,
Thomas Powles

Abstract

Therapeutic antibodies that block the programmed death-1 (PD-1)-programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) pathway can induce robust and durable responses in patients with various cancers, including metastatic urothelial cancer. However, these responses only occur in a subset of patients. Elucidating the determinants of response and resistance is key to improving outcomes and developing new treatment strategies. Here we examined tumours from a large cohort of patients with metastatic urothelial cancer who were treated with an anti-PD-L1 agent (atezolizumab) and identified major determinants of clinical outcome. Response to treatment was associated with CD8+ T-effector cell phenotype and, to an even greater extent, high neoantigen or tumour mutation burden. Lack of response was associated with a signature of transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) signalling in fibroblasts. This occurred particularly in patients with tumours, which showed exclusion of CD8+ T cells from the tumour parenchyma that were instead found in the fibroblast- and collagen-rich peritumoural stroma; a common phenotype among patients with metastatic urothelial cancer. Using a mouse model that recapitulates this immune-excluded phenotype, we found that therapeutic co-administration of TGFβ-blocking and anti-PD-L1 antibodies reduced TGFβ signalling in stromal cells, facilitated T-cell penetration into the centre of tumours, and provoked vigorous anti-tumour immunity and tumour regression. Integration of these three independent biological features provides the best basis for understanding patient outcome in this setting and suggests that TGFβ shapes the tumour microenvironment to restrain anti-tumour immunity by restricting T-cell infiltration.

More about this publication

Nature

Volume 554
Issue nr. 7693
Pages 544-548
Publication date 22-02-2018

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/nature25501
Europe PubMed Central 29443960
Pubmed 29443960

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