T cell dynamics with neoadjuvant immunotherapy in head and neck cancer
- PMID: 39658611
- DOI: 10.1038/s41571-024-00969-w
T cell dynamics with neoadjuvant immunotherapy in head and neck cancer
Abstract
Immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are being tested as neoadjuvant therapies in various solid tumours, including in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), with promising results. Key findings thus far include that this approach is well-tolerated with favourable clinical outcomes including promising pathological response rates in initial studies. Pathological responses are likely to be increased by combining other agents with anti-PD-(L)1 antibodies. Comparisons of baseline biopsy samples with post-treatment surgical specimens have enabled correlative studies utilizing multiomic and immunogenomic methods. Data from these studies suggest that pretreatment intratumoural tissue-resident memory CD8+ T cells are key drivers of tumour regression and give rise to both local and systemic antitumour immune responses. Analyses of systemic responses have defined a PD-1+KLRG1- circulating CD8+ T cell subpopulation that is highly predictive of response, and revealed the interrelationships between intratumoural clones and circulating CD8+ T cells. Lastly, interrogation of T cell populations within lymph nodes is beginning to delineate the immune crosstalk between the primary tumour and tumour-draining lymph nodes and how this relationship might be disrupted with tumour infiltration of the latter. In this Review, we examine data from trials testing neoadjuvant ICIs in patients with HNSCC, focusing on human papillomavirus-unrelated disease, and highlight correlative immunogenomic findings from these trials.
© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: G.J.H. has acted as a consultant and/or adviser of and/or received research funding from Bicara, BMS, Exicure, Gateway for Cancer Research, GSK, Kite Pharma, Maverick, Merck, NantKwest/Altor Bioscience, Regeneron, Sanofi Genzyme and Secura Bio. J.D.S. has received research funding from BMS, Debiopharm, Merck and Regeneron, and has acted as a consultant and/or adviser of ACI Clinical, Astellas, Castle Biosciences, Catenion, Debiopharn, Genentech, Immunitas, LEK and Merck KGA, and owns equity in Doximity and Immunitas. R.I.H. has acted as a consultant and/or adviser for, and had received research funding from, AstraZeneca, Bayer, BMS, Eisai, GSK, ISA, Kura, Merck, Mirati, Nanobiotix, NCCN and Pfizer. D.R.A. has acted as a consultant and/or adviser for Celgene, Cue Biopharma, Eli Lilly, Loxo Oncology, Merck and Pfizer, and has received research funding from Aduro, Astrazeneca, Atara, Blueprint Medicine, Celgene, Celldex, Cue Biopharma, Eli Lilly, Enzychem, Exilixis, Innate, Kura, Matrix, Medimmune, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche and Shanghai De Novo. R.U. has acted as a consultant and/or adviser for Daiichi–Sankyo, Merck and Regeneron, and has received research funding from Merck. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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