Blood Cancer Journal (Jan 2022)

Azacitidine-induced reconstitution of the bone marrow T cell repertoire is associated with superior survival in AML patients

  • Juliane Grimm,
  • Donjete Simnica,
  • Nadja Jäkel,
  • Lisa Paschold,
  • Edith Willscher,
  • Susann Schulze,
  • Christine Dierks,
  • Haifa Kathrin Al-Ali,
  • Mascha Binder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-022-00615-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Hypomethylating agents (HMA) like azacitidine are licensed for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients ineligible for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Biomarker-driven identification of HMA-responsive patients may facilitate the choice of treatment, especially in the challenging subgroup above 60 years of age. Since HMA possesses immunomodulatory functions that constitute part of their anti-tumor effect, we set out to analyze the bone marrow (BM) immune environment by next-generation sequencing of T cell receptor beta (TRB) repertoires in 51 AML patients treated within the RAS-AZIC trial. Patients with elevated pretreatment T cell diversity (11 out of 41 patients) and those with a boost of TRB richness on day 15 after azacitidine treatment (12 out of 46 patients) had longer event-free and overall survival. Both pretreatment and dynamic BM T cell metrics proved to be better predictors of outcome than other established risk factors. The favorable broadening of the BM T cell space appeared to be driven by antigen since these patients showed significant skewing of TRBV gene usage. Our data suggest that one course of AZA can cause reconstitution to a more physiological T cell BM niche and that the T cell space plays an underestimated prognostic role in AML. Trial registration: DRKS identifier: DRKS00004519