Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Oct 2023)

Ablative radiation alone in stage I lung cancer produces an adaptive systemic immune response: insights from a prospective study

  • Julie R Brahmer,
  • Patrick M Forde,
  • Jarushka Naidoo,
  • Valsamo Anagnostou,
  • Cheng Ting Lin,
  • Peter B Illei,
  • Kellie N Smith,
  • Mara Lanis,
  • Khinh Ranh Voong,
  • Bradley Presson,
  • Dipika Singh,
  • Zhen Zeng,
  • Russell K Hales,
  • Phuoc T Tran,
  • Christos Georgiades,
  • Jeffrey Thiboutout

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-007188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10

Abstract

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Stereotactic ablative body radiation (SABR) delivers high rates of local control in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); however, systemic immune effects are poorly understood. Here, we evaluate the early pathologic and immunologic effects of SABR. Blood/core-needle tumor biopsies were collected from six patients with stage I NSCLC before and 5–7 days after SABR (48 Gy/4 or 50 Gy/5 fractions). Serial blood was collected up to 1-year post-SABR. We used immunohistochemistry to evaluate pathological changes, immune-cell populations (CD8, FoxP3), and PD-L1/PD-1 expression within the tumor. We evaluated T-cell receptor (TCR) profile changes in the tumor using TCR sequencing. We used the MANAFEST (Mutation-Associated Neoantigen Functional Expansion of Specific T-cells) assay to detect peripheral neoantigen-specific T-cell responses and dynamics. At a median follow-up of 40 months, 83% of patients (n=5) were alive without tumor progression. Early post-SABR biopsies showed viable tumor and similar distribution of immune-cell populations as compared with baseline samples. Core-needle samples proved insufficient to detect population-level TCR-repertoire changes. Functionally, neoantigen-specific T-cells were detected in the blood prior to SABR. A subset of these patients had a transient increase in the frequency of neoantigen-specific T-cells between 1 week and 3–6 months after SABR. SABR alone could induce a delayed, transient neoantigen-specific T-cell immunologic response in patients with stage I NSCLC.