Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Jul 2024)

Exploring markers of immunoresponsiveness in papillary thyroid carcinoma and future treatment strategies

  • Erminia Massarelli,
  • Ravi Salgia,
  • Diana Bell,
  • Haiqing Li,
  • Arya Amini,
  • Sue Chang,
  • Atish Mohanty,
  • Michelle Afkhami,
  • Amanda Reyes,
  • Rebecca Pharaon,
  • Holly Yin,
  • Dana Do,
  • Arin Nam,
  • Thomas Gernon,
  • Robert Kang,
  • Sagus Sampath,
  • Prakash Kulkarni,
  • Raju Pillai,
  • Vicky Villaflor,
  • Ellie Maghami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2023-008505
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7

Abstract

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Background The study summarizes the potential use of immunotherapy for BRAF-mutated papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) by analyzing the immune profile of City of Hope PTC patient samples and comparing them to the thyroid dataset available in the TCGA database.Materials and methods PTC cases with available formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded archived tumor tissue were identified. RNA was extracted from the tumor tissue and analyzed by NanoString to evaluate their immune gene expression profile. Immunohistochemistry was used to determine the expression of immune suppressive genes and lymphocytic infiltration into the tumor tissue. Thyroid cancer cell lines (MDA-T32, MDA-T68, MDA-T85, and MDA-T120) were used to determine the correlation between the BRAF inhibition and CD274 expression.Results The study found that PTC cases with BRAF mutations had higher expression of immune checkpoint markers CD274 and CTLA4, as well as higher tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, particularly CD4+T cells. Additionally, the study identified immunosuppressive markers expressed by tumor cells like CD73, CD276, and CD200 that could be targeted for immunotherapy. Further experiments using PTC cell lines lead to the conclusion that CD274 expression correlates with BRAF activity and that inhibitors of BRAF could potentially be used in combination with immunotherapy to treat PTC.Conclusions These findings suggest that PTC cases with BRAF mutations or high expression may be correlated with an immune hot signature and could benefit from immunotherapeutic strategies.