Systemic Interferon-g Increases MHC Class I Expression and T-cell Infiltration in Cold Tumors: Results of a phase 0 clinical trial

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Abstract

Interferon-γ (IFNγ) has been studied as a cancer treatment with limited evidence of clinical benefit. However, it could play a role in cancer immunotherapy combination treatments. Despite high expression of immunogenic cancer–testis antigens, synovial sarcoma (SS) and myxoid/ round cell liposarcoma (MRCL) have a cold tumor microenvironment (TME), with few infiltrating T cells and low expression of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I). We hypothesized that IFNγ treatment could drive inflammation in a cold TME, facilitating further immunotherapy. We conducted a phase 0 clinical trial treating 8 SS or MRCL patients with weekly systemic IFNγ. We performed pre- and posttreatment biopsies. IFNγ changed the SS and MRCL TME, inducing tumor-surface MHC-I expression and significant T-cell infiltration (P < 0.05). Gene-expression analysis suggested increased tumor antigen presentation and less exhausted phenotypes of the tumor-infiltrating T cells. Newly emergent antigen-specific humoral and/or T-cell responses were found in 3 of 7 evaluable patients. However, increased expression of PD-L1 was observed on tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells and in some cases tumor cells. These findings suggest that systemic IFNγ used to convert SS and MRCL into "hot" tumors will work in concert with anti–PD-1 therapy to provide patient benefit.

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Zhang, S., Kohli, K., Graeme Black, R., Yao, L., Spadinger, S. M., He, Q., … Pollack, S. M. (2019). Systemic Interferon-g Increases MHC Class I Expression and T-cell Infiltration in Cold Tumors: Results of a phase 0 clinical trial. Cancer Immunology Research, 7(8), 1237–1243. https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-18-0940

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