Cancers (Jul 2022)

Circulating Exhausted PD-1<sup>+</sup>CD39<sup>+</sup> Helper CD4 T Cells Are Tumor-Antigen-Specific and Predict Response to PD-1/PD-L1 Axis Blockade

  • Carlos Martinez-Gomez,
  • Marie Michelas,
  • Clara-Maria Scarlata,
  • Anna Salvioni,
  • Carlos Gomez-Roca,
  • Victor Sarradin,
  • Françoise Lauzéral-Vizcaino,
  • Virginie Féliu,
  • Agnès Dupret-Bories,
  • Gwénaël Ferron,
  • Jérôme Sarini,
  • Christel Devaud,
  • Jean-Pierre Delord,
  • Camille-Charlotte Balança,
  • Alejandra Martinez,
  • Maha Ayyoub

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153679
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 15
p. 3679

Abstract

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Tumor-infiltrating exhausted PD-1hiCD39+ tumor-antigen (Ag)-specific CD4 T cells contribute to the response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB), but their circulating counterparts, which could represent accessible biomarkers, have not been assessed. Here, we analyzed circulating PD-1+CD39+ CD4 T cells and show that this population was present at higher proportions in cancer patients than in healthy individuals and was enriched in activated HLA-DR+ and ICOS+ and proliferating KI67+ cells, indicative of their involvement in ongoing immune responses. Among memory CD4 T cells, this population contained the lowest proportions of cells producing effector cytokines, suggesting they were exhausted. In patients with HPV-induced malignancies, the PD-1+CD39+ population contained high proportions of HPV Ag-specific T cells. In patients treated by ICB for HPV-induced tumors, the proportion of circulating PD-1+CD39+ CD4 T cells was predictive of the clinical response. Our results identify CD39 expression as a surrogate marker of circulating helper tumor-Ag-specific CD4 T cells.

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