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Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha

INTRODUCTION: Despite the recent approval of several therapies in the adjuvant setting of melanoma, tumor relapse still occurs in a significant number of completely resected stage III-IV patients. In this context, the use of cancer vaccines is still relevant and may increase the response to immune c...

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Autores principales: Moschella, Federica, Buccione, Carla, Ruspantini, Irene, Castiello, Luciano, Rozo Gonzalez, Andrea, Iacobone, Floriana, Ferraresi, Virginia, Palermo, Belinda, Nisticò, Paola, Belardelli, Filippo, Proietti, Enrico, Macchia, Iole, Urbani, Francesca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10233106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274275
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1145667
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author Moschella, Federica
Buccione, Carla
Ruspantini, Irene
Castiello, Luciano
Rozo Gonzalez, Andrea
Iacobone, Floriana
Ferraresi, Virginia
Palermo, Belinda
Nisticò, Paola
Belardelli, Filippo
Proietti, Enrico
Macchia, Iole
Urbani, Francesca
author_facet Moschella, Federica
Buccione, Carla
Ruspantini, Irene
Castiello, Luciano
Rozo Gonzalez, Andrea
Iacobone, Floriana
Ferraresi, Virginia
Palermo, Belinda
Nisticò, Paola
Belardelli, Filippo
Proietti, Enrico
Macchia, Iole
Urbani, Francesca
author_sort Moschella, Federica
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Despite the recent approval of several therapies in the adjuvant setting of melanoma, tumor relapse still occurs in a significant number of completely resected stage III-IV patients. In this context, the use of cancer vaccines is still relevant and may increase the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. We previously demonstrated safety, immunogenicity and preliminary evidence of clinical efficacy in stage III/IV resected melanoma patients subjected to a combination therapy based on peptide vaccination together with intermittent low-dose interferon-α2b, with or without dacarbazine preconditioning (https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu/ctr-search/search, identifier: 2008-008211-26). In this setting, we then focused on pre-treatment patient immune status to highlight possible factors associated with clinical outcome. METHODS: Multiparametric flow cytometry was used to identify baseline immune profiles in patients’ peripheral blood mononuclear cells and correlation with the patient clinical outcome. Receiver operating characteristic curve, Kaplan-Meier survival and principal component analyses were used to evaluate the predictive power of the identified markers. RESULTS: We identified 12 different circulating T and NK cell subsets with significant (p ≤ 0.05) differential baseline levels in patients who later relapsed with respect to patients who remained free of disease. All 12 parameters showed a good prognostic accuracy (AUC>0.7, p ≤ 0.05) and 11 of them significantly predicted the relapse-free survival. Remarkably, 3 classifiers also predicted the overall survival. Focusing on immune cell subsets that can be analyzed through simple surface staining, three subsets were identified, namely regulatory T cells, CD56(dim)CD16(-) NK cells and central memory γδ T cells. Each subset showed an AUC>0.8 and principal component analysis significantly grouped relapsing and non-relapsing patients (p=0.034). These three subsets were used to calculate a combination score that was able to perfectly distinguish relapsing and non-relapsing patients (AUC=1; p=0). Noticeably, patients with a combined score ≥2 demonstrated a strong advantage in both relapse-free (p=0.002) and overall (p=0.011) survival as compared to patients with a score <2. DISCUSSION: Predictive markers may be used to guide patient selection for personalized therapies and/or improve follow-up strategies. This study provides preliminary evidence on the identification of peripheral blood immune biomarkers potentially capable of predicting the clinical response to combined vaccine-based adjuvant therapies in melanoma.
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spelling pubmed-102331062023-06-02 Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha Moschella, Federica Buccione, Carla Ruspantini, Irene Castiello, Luciano Rozo Gonzalez, Andrea Iacobone, Floriana Ferraresi, Virginia Palermo, Belinda Nisticò, Paola Belardelli, Filippo Proietti, Enrico Macchia, Iole Urbani, Francesca Front Oncol Oncology INTRODUCTION: Despite the recent approval of several therapies in the adjuvant setting of melanoma, tumor relapse still occurs in a significant number of completely resected stage III-IV patients. In this context, the use of cancer vaccines is still relevant and may increase the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. We previously demonstrated safety, immunogenicity and preliminary evidence of clinical efficacy in stage III/IV resected melanoma patients subjected to a combination therapy based on peptide vaccination together with intermittent low-dose interferon-α2b, with or without dacarbazine preconditioning (https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu/ctr-search/search, identifier: 2008-008211-26). In this setting, we then focused on pre-treatment patient immune status to highlight possible factors associated with clinical outcome. METHODS: Multiparametric flow cytometry was used to identify baseline immune profiles in patients’ peripheral blood mononuclear cells and correlation with the patient clinical outcome. Receiver operating characteristic curve, Kaplan-Meier survival and principal component analyses were used to evaluate the predictive power of the identified markers. RESULTS: We identified 12 different circulating T and NK cell subsets with significant (p ≤ 0.05) differential baseline levels in patients who later relapsed with respect to patients who remained free of disease. All 12 parameters showed a good prognostic accuracy (AUC>0.7, p ≤ 0.05) and 11 of them significantly predicted the relapse-free survival. Remarkably, 3 classifiers also predicted the overall survival. Focusing on immune cell subsets that can be analyzed through simple surface staining, three subsets were identified, namely regulatory T cells, CD56(dim)CD16(-) NK cells and central memory γδ T cells. Each subset showed an AUC>0.8 and principal component analysis significantly grouped relapsing and non-relapsing patients (p=0.034). These three subsets were used to calculate a combination score that was able to perfectly distinguish relapsing and non-relapsing patients (AUC=1; p=0). Noticeably, patients with a combined score ≥2 demonstrated a strong advantage in both relapse-free (p=0.002) and overall (p=0.011) survival as compared to patients with a score <2. DISCUSSION: Predictive markers may be used to guide patient selection for personalized therapies and/or improve follow-up strategies. This study provides preliminary evidence on the identification of peripheral blood immune biomarkers potentially capable of predicting the clinical response to combined vaccine-based adjuvant therapies in melanoma. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10233106/ /pubmed/37274275 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1145667 Text en Copyright © 2023 Moschella, Buccione, Ruspantini, Castiello, Rozo Gonzalez, Iacobone, Ferraresi, Palermo, Nisticò, Belardelli, Proietti, Macchia and Urbani https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Moschella, Federica
Buccione, Carla
Ruspantini, Irene
Castiello, Luciano
Rozo Gonzalez, Andrea
Iacobone, Floriana
Ferraresi, Virginia
Palermo, Belinda
Nisticò, Paola
Belardelli, Filippo
Proietti, Enrico
Macchia, Iole
Urbani, Francesca
Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title_full Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title_fullStr Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title_full_unstemmed Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title_short Blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage III/IV resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
title_sort blood immune cells as potential biomarkers predicting relapse-free survival of stage iii/iv resected melanoma patients treated with peptide-based vaccination and interferon-alpha
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10233106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274275
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1145667
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