Neoadjuvant anti-4-1BB confers protection against spontaneous metastasis through low-affinity intratumor CD8 + T cells in triple-negative breast cancer
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Neoadjuvant immunotherapy seeks to harness the primary tumor as a source of relevant tumor antigens to enhance systemic anti-tumor immunity through improved immunological surveillance. Despite having revolutionized the treatment of patients with high-risk early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), a significant portion of patients remain unresponsive and succumb to metastatic recurrence post-treatment. Here, we found that optimally scheduled neoadjuvant administration of anti-4-1BB monotherapy was able to counteract metastases and prolong survival following surgical resection. Phenotypic and transcriptional profiling revealed enhanced 4-1BB expression on tumor-infiltrating intermediate (T int ), relative to progenitor (T prog ) and terminally exhausted (T term ) T cells. Furthermore, T int was enriched in low-affinity T cells. Treatment with anti-4-1BB drove clonal expansion of T int , with reduced expression of tissue-retention marker CD103 in T prog . This was accompanied by increased TCR clonotype sharing between paired tumors and pre-metastatic lungs. Further interrogation of sorted intratumor T cells confirmed enhanced T cell egress into circulation following anti-4-1BB treatment. In addition, gene signature extracted from anti-4-1BB treated T int was consistently associated with improved clinical outcomes in BRCA patients. Combinatorial neoadjuvant anti-4-1BB and ablation of tumor-derived CXCL16 resulted in enhanced therapeutic effect. These findings illustrate the intratumor changes underpinning the efficacy of neoadjuvant anti-4-1BB, highlighting the reciprocity between local tissue-retention and distant immunologic fortification, suggesting treatment can reverse the siphoning of intratumor T cells to primary tumor, enabling redistribution to distant tissues and subsequent protection against metastases.