Ablative radiation alone in stage I lung cancer produces an adaptive systemic immune response: insights from a prospective study

Author:

Voong Khinh RanhORCID,Illei Peter B,Presson Bradley,Singh Dipika,Zeng Zhen,Lanis Mara,Hales Russell K,Hu Chen,Tran Phuoc T,Georgiades Christos,Lin Cheng TingORCID,Thiboutout Jeffrey,Brahmer Julie R,Forde Patrick M,Naidoo JarushkaORCID,Anagnostou ValsamoORCID,Smith Kellie N

Abstract

Stereotactic ablative body radiation (SABR) delivers high rates of local control in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); however, systemic immune effects are poorly understood. Here, we evaluate the early pathologic and immunologic effects of SABR. Blood/core-needle tumor biopsies were collected from six patients with stage I NSCLC before and 5–7 days after SABR (48 Gy/4 or 50 Gy/5 fractions). Serial blood was collected up to 1-year post-SABR. We used immunohistochemistry to evaluate pathological changes, immune-cell populations (CD8, FoxP3), and PD-L1/PD-1 expression within the tumor. We evaluated T-cell receptor (TCR) profile changes in the tumor using TCR sequencing. We used the MANAFEST (Mutation-Associated Neoantigen Functional Expansion of Specific T-cells) assay to detect peripheral neoantigen-specific T-cell responses and dynamics. At a median follow-up of 40 months, 83% of patients (n=5) were alive without tumor progression. Early post-SABR biopsies showed viable tumor and similar distribution of immune-cell populations as compared with baseline samples. Core-needle samples proved insufficient to detect population-level TCR-repertoire changes. Functionally, neoantigen-specific T-cells were detected in the blood prior to SABR. A subset of these patients had a transient increase in the frequency of neoantigen-specific T-cells between 1 week and 3–6 months after SABR. SABR alone could induce a delayed, transient neoantigen-specific T-cell immunologic response in patients with stage I NSCLC.

Funder

The Mark Foundation for Cancer Research

Bloomberg-Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy

American Lung Association

Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy

Commonwealth Foundation

The Mark Foundation Center for Advanced Genomics and Imaging

Lung Cancer Research Foundation

LUNGevity Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Swim Across America

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cancer Research,Pharmacology,Oncology,Molecular Medicine,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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