Nature Communications (Dec 2024)

Integrative multi-omics analysis uncovers tumor-immune-gut axis influencing immunotherapy outcomes in ovarian cancer

  • Spencer R. Rosario,
  • Mark D. Long,
  • Shanmuga Chilakapati,
  • Eduardo Cortes Gomez,
  • Sebastiano Battaglia,
  • Prashant K. Singh,
  • Jianmin Wang,
  • Katy Wang,
  • Kristopher Attwood,
  • Suzanne M. Hess,
  • AJ Robert McGray,
  • Kunle Odunsi,
  • Brahm H. Segal,
  • Gyorgy Paragh,
  • Song Liu,
  • Jennifer A. Wargo,
  • Emese Zsiros

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54565-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Recurrent ovarian cancer patients, especially those resistant to platinum, lack effective curative treatments. To address this, we conducted a phase 2 clinical trial (NCT02853318) combining pembrolizumab with bevacizumab, to increase T cell infiltration into the tumor, and oral cyclophosphamide, to reduce the number of regulatory T cells. The trial accrued 40 heavily pretreated recurrent ovarian cancer patients. The primary endpoint, progression free survival, was extended to a median of 10.2 months. The secondary endpoints demonstrated an objective response rate of 47.5%, and disease control in 30% of patients for over a year while maintaining a good quality of life. We performed comprehensive molecular, immune, microbiome, and metabolic profiling on samples of trial patients. Here, we show increased T and B cell clusters and distinct microbial patterns with amino acid and lipid metabolism are linked to exceptional clinical responses. This study suggests the immune milieu and host-microbiome can be leveraged to improve antitumor response in future immunotherapy trials.