LAG‐3 transcriptomic expression patterns across malignancies: Implications for precision immunotherapeutics

Author:

Adashek Jacob J.1ORCID,Kato Shumei2,Nishizaki Daisuke2,Miyashita Hirotaka3,De Pradip4,Lee Suzanna2,Pabla Sarabjot5,Nesline Mary5,Conroy Jeffrey M.5,DePietro Paul5,Lippman Scott2,Kurzrock Razelle678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oncology The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center The Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Center for Personalized Cancer Therapy and Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of Medicine UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center La Jolla California USA

3. Dartmouth Cancer Center, Hematology and Medical Oncology Lebanon New Hampshire USA

4. Avera Cancer Institute Sioux Falls South Dakota USA

5. OmniSeq Inc. Buffalo New York USA

6. WIN Consortium San Diego California USA

7. Department of Oncology MCW Cancer Center Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

8. Department of Oncology University of Nebraska Omaha Nebraska USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundLymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG‐3) or CD223 is a transmembrane protein that serves as an immune checkpoint which attenuates T‐cell activation. Many clinical trials of LAG‐3 inhibitors have had modest effects, but recent data indicate that the LAG‐3 antibody relatlimab, together with nivolumab (anti‐PD‐1), provided greater benefit than nivolumab alone in patients with melanoma.MethodsIn this study, the RNA expression levels of 397 genes were assessed in 514 diverse cancers at a clinical‐grade laboratory (OmniSeq: https://www.omniseq.com/). Transcript abundance was normalized to internal housekeeping gene profiles and ranked (0–100 percentile) using a reference population (735 tumors; 35 histologies).ResultsA total of 116 of 514 tumors (22.6%) had high LAG‐3 transcript expression (≥75 percentile rank). Cancers with the greatest proportion of high LAG‐3 transcripts were neuroendocrine (47% of patients) and uterine (42%); colorectal had among the lowest proportion of high LAG‐3 expression (15% of patients) (all p < 0.05 multivariate); 50% of melanomas were high LAG‐3 expressors. There was significant independent association between high LAG‐3 expression and high expression of other checkpoints, including programmed death‐ligand 1 (PD‐L1), PD‐1, and CTLA‐4, as well as high tumor mutational burden (TMB) ≥10 mutations/megabase, a marker for immunotherapy response (all p < 0.05 multivariate). However, within all tumor types, there was inter‐patient variability in LAG‐3 expression level.ConclusionsProspective studies are therefore needed to determine if high levels of the LAG‐3 checkpoint are responsible for resistance to anti‐PD‐1/PD‐L1 or anti‐CTLA‐4 antibodies. Furthermore, a precision/personalized immunotherapy approach may require interrogating individual tumor immunograms to match patients to the right combination of immunotherapeutic agents for their malignancy.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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