Poster Presentation The Australasian Society for Immunology 2017 Annual Scientific Meeting

IL-15 dependent melanoma-resident CD8+ T cell numbers predict patient survival and outcome of anti-PD1 therapy (#332)

Jarem Edwards 1 , James S Wilmott 1 , Jason Madore 1 , Tuba Nur Gide 1 , Camelia Quek 1 , Jinbiao Chen 1 , Rehana Hewavisenti 2 , Peter Hersey 2 , Thomas Gebhardt 3 , Wolfgang Wininger 2 , Warwick J Britton 2 , Robyn P.M Saw 1 , John F Thompson 1 , Alexander M Menzies 1 , Georgina V Long 1 4 5 , Richard A Scolyer 1 6 , Mainthan Palendira 2
  1. Melanoma Institute, North Sydney, NSW, Australia
  2. Centenary Institute, Newtown, NSW, Australia
  3. Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  4. Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia
  5. Mater Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia
  6. Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, NSW, Australia

Therapeutic blockade of immune checkpoints has revolutionized cancer treatment. Durable responses however, occur in less than half of those treated and efforts to improve treatment efficacy are confounded by a lack of understanding of the exact immune cell populations initiating the anti-tumor immune response. We performed multi-parameter flow cytometry and quantitative multiplex immunofluorescence staining on tumor specimens from immunotherapy naïve melanoma patients and longitudinal biopsy specimen obtained from patients undergoing anti-PD1 therapy. Increased numbers of CD69+CD103+ tumor-resident CD8+ T cells is associated with improved melanoma-specific survival and is a stronger predictor of outcome than total CD8+ T cell counts in immunotherapy-naive melanoma patients. Local IL-15 expression levels determined the proportion of tumour-resident T cell numbers. Importantly, the expression of immune checkpoints was largely confined to this subset and these cells significantly expanded early during anti-PD1 immunotherapy. Tumour-resident CD8+ T cell numbers better predict patient survival than total CD8+ T cells in metastatic melanoma and response to immunotherapy. Enrichment of several immune inhibitory receptors suggests their immune profile could predict targets for immune checkpoint blockade.