Cargando…

Stress Keratin 17 Is a Predictive Biomarker Inversely Associated with Response to Immune Check-Point Blockade in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinomas and Beyond

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Between 15 and 35% of head and neck cancer patients respond to immune check-point blockade therapy (ICB), and some may experience potentially life-threatening adverse events. Biomarkers that can reliably predict response to therapy are needed to improve patient selection. Our pilot d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lozar, Taja, Laklouk, Israa, Golfinos, Athena E., Gavrielatou, Niki, Xu, Jin, Flynn, Christopher, Keske, Aysenur, Yu, Menggang, Bruce, Justine Y., Wang, Wei, Grasic Kuhar, Cvetka, Bailey, Howard H., Harari, Paul M., Dinh, Huy Q., Rimm, David L., Hu, Rong, Lambert, Paul F., Fitzpatrick, Megan B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10571921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37835599
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15194905
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Between 15 and 35% of head and neck cancer patients respond to immune check-point blockade therapy (ICB), and some may experience potentially life-threatening adverse events. Biomarkers that can reliably predict response to therapy are needed to improve patient selection. Our pilot data suggest the expression of cytokeratin 17 in pretreatment tumor samples predicts response to ICB in head and neck cancer. The aim of this study was to interrogate two independent patient cohorts to validate these observations and develop a robust CK17 immunohistochemical assay. Our study revealed cytokeratin 17 may be an independent predictive biomarker of inferior response to ICB in head and neck cancer. In an ICB-treated cohort of 552 patients with various cancer types, cytokeratin 17 RNA expression was predictive of patient survival. ABSTRACT: Low response rates in immune check-point blockade (ICB)-treated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) drive a critical need for robust, clinically validated predictive biomarkers. Our group previously showed that stress keratin 17 (CK17) suppresses macrophage-mediated CXCL9/CXCL10 chemokine signaling involved in attracting activated CD8+ T cells into tumors, correlating with decreased response rate to pembrolizumab-based therapy in a pilot cohort of ICB-treated HNSCC (n = 26). Here, we performed an expanded analysis of the predictive value of CK17 in ICB-treated HNSCC according to the REMARK criteria and investigated the gene expression profiles associated with high CK17 expression. Pretreatment samples from pembrolizumab-treated HNSCC patients were stained via immunohistochemistry using a CK17 monoclonal antibody (n = 48) and subjected to spatial transcriptomic profiling (n = 8). Our findings were validated in an independent retrospective cohort (n = 22). CK17 RNA expression in pembrolizumab-treated patients with various cancer types was investigated for predictive significance. Of the 48 patients (60% male, median age of 61.5 years), 21 (44%) were CK17 high, and 27 (56%) were CK17 low. A total of 17 patients (35%, 77% CK17 low) had disease control, while 31 patients (65%, 45% CK17 low) had progressive disease. High CK17 expression was associated with a lack of disease control (p = 0.037), shorter time to treatment failure (p = 0.025), and progression-free survival (PFS, p = 0.004), but not overall survival (OS, p = 0.06). A high CK17 expression was associated with lack of disease control in an independent validation cohort (p = 0.011). PD-L1 expression did not correlate with CK17 expression or clinical outcome. CK17 RNA expression was predictive of PFS and OS in 552 pembrolizumab-treated cancer patients. Our findings indicate that high CK17 expression may predict resistance to ICB in HNSCC patients and beyond.