Tumor-Infiltrating Immune Cells and HLA Expression as Potential Biomarkers Predicting Response to PD-1 Inhibitor Therapy in Stage IV Melanoma Patients

Hegyi, Barbara [Hegyi, Barbara (általános orvos), author] National Institute of Oncology; School of PhD Studies (SU); Csikó, Kristóf György; Balatoni, Tímea [Balatoni, Tímea (bőrgyógyászat, kl...), author] National Institute of Oncology; Fröhlich, Georgina [Fröhlich, Georgina (Sugárfizika), author] National Institute of Oncology; Department of Biological Physics (ELTE / ELU FoS); Bőcs, Katalin; Tóth, Erika [Tóth, Erika (patológia), author] National Institute of Oncology; Mohos, Anita [Mohos, Anita (Patológia, Bőrgyó...), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Patológiai és Kísérleti Rákkutató Intézet (SU / FM / I); Neumark, Anna Rebeka; Menyhárt, Csenge Dorottya; Ferrone, Soldano; Ladányi, Andrea ✉ [Ladányi, Andrea (Kísérleti onkológia), author] National Institute of Oncology

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: BIOMOLECULES 2218-273X 2218-273X 14 (12) Paper: 1609 , 14 p. 2024
  • SJR Scopus - Biochemistry: Q1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (NKFI ANN-128524) Funder: NRDIO
  • (National Tumor Biology Laboratory (2022–2.1.1-NL-2022-00010)))
Subjects:
  • Oncology
PD-1 inhibitors are known to be effective in melanoma; however, a considerable proportion of patients fail to respond to therapy, necessitating the identification of predictive markers. We examined the predictive value of tumor cell HLA class I and II expression and immune cell infiltration in melanoma patients treated with PD-1 inhibitors. Pretreatment surgical samples from 40 stage IV melanoma patients were studied immunohistochemically for melanoma cell expression of HLA class I molecules (using four antibody clones with different specificities), HLA-II, and immune cell infiltration (using a panel of 10 markers). Among the responders, the ratio of patients showing melanoma cell HLA-II expression was higher compared to non-responders (p = 0.0158), and similar results were obtained in the case of two anti-HLA-I antibodies. A combined score of HLA-I/II expression also predicted treatment response (p = 0.0019). Intratumoral infiltration was stronger in the responders for most immune cell types. Progression-free survival showed an association with HLA-II expression, the combined HLA score, and the density of immune cells expressing CD134 and PD-1, while overall survival was significantly associated only with HLA class II expression. Our findings corroborate previous results indicating the importance of immune cell infiltration and tumor cell HLA-II expression in the efficacy of PD-1 inhibitor treatment in a “real world” patient cohort and suggest the potential predictive role of HLA class I expression.
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2025-04-24 01:17