Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Mar 2022)

MEK1/2 inhibition transiently alters the tumor immune microenvironment to enhance immunotherapy efficacy against head and neck cancer

  • Barak Rotblat,
  • Andreas Mock,
  • Jerome Fayette,
  • Limor Cohen,
  • Idan Cohen,
  • Elena Voronov,
  • Jebrane Bouaoud,
  • Lucas Michon,
  • Pierre Saintigny,
  • Luc G T Morris,
  • Manu Prasad,
  • Jonathan Zorea,
  • Sankar Jagadeeshan,
  • Avital B Shnerb,
  • Sooraj Mathukkada,
  • Ofra Novoplansky,
  • Mai Badarni,
  • Ksenia M Yegodayev,
  • Sapir Tzadok,
  • Libor Brezina,
  • Andy Karabajakian,
  • Tomer Cooks,
  • Irit Allon,
  • Orr Dimitstein,
  • Benzion Joshua,
  • Dexin Kong,
  • Maurizio Scaltriti,
  • Yaron Carmi,
  • Cristina Conde-Lopez,
  • Jochen Hess,
  • Ina Kurth,
  • Moshe Elkabets

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2021-003917
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3

Abstract

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Background Although the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) pathway is hyperactive in head and neck cancer (HNC), inhibition of MEK1/2 in HNC patients has not shown clinically meaningful activity. Therefore, we aimed to characterize the effect of MEK1/2 inhibition on the tumor microenvironment (TME) of MAPK-driven HNC, elucidate tumor-host interaction mechanisms facilitating immune escape on treatment, and apply rationale-based therapy combination immunotherapy and MEK1/2 inhibitor to induce tumor clearance.Methods Mouse syngeneic tumors and xenografts experiments were used to analyze tumor growth in vivo. Single-cell cytometry by time of flight, flow cytometry, and tissue stainings were used to profile the TME in response to trametinib (MEK1/2 inhibitor). Co-culture of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) with CD8+ T cells was used to measure immune suppression. Overexpression of colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) in tumor cells was used to show the effect of tumor-derived CSF-1 on sensitivity to trametinib and anti-programmed death- 1 (αPD-1) in mice. In HNC patients, the ratio between CSF-1 and CD8A was measured to test the association with clinical benefit to αPD-1 and αPD-L1 treatment.Results Using preclinical HNC models, we demonstrated that treatment with trametinib delays HNC initiation and progression by reducing tumor cell proliferation and enhancing the antitumor immunity of CD8+ T cells. Activation of CD8+ T cells by supplementation with αPD-1 antibody eliminated tumors and induced an immune memory in the cured mice. Mechanistically, an early response to trametinib treatment sensitized tumors to αPD-1-supplementation by attenuating the expression of tumor-derived CSF-1, which reduced the abundance of two CSF-1R+CD11c+ MDSC populations in the TME. In contrast, prolonged treatment with trametinib abolished the antitumor activity of αPD-1, because tumor cells undergoing the epithelial to mesenchymal transition in response to trametinib restored CSF-1 expression and recreated an immune-suppressive TME.Conclusion Our findings provide the rationale for testing the trametinib/αPD-1 combination in HNC and highlight the importance of sensitizing tumors to αPD-1 by using MEK1/2 to interfere with the tumor–host interaction. Moreover, we describe the concept that treatment of cancer with a targeted therapy transiently induces an immune-active microenvironment, and supplementation of immunotherapy during this time further activates the antitumor machinery to cause tumor elimination.