Ratios of T-cell immune effectors and checkpoint molecules as prognostic biomarkers in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: A population-based study

Colm Keane, Frank Vari, Mark Hertzberg, Kim Anh Lê Cao, Michael R. Green, Erica Han, John F. Seymour, Rodney J. Hicks, Devinder Gill, Pauline Crooks, Clare Gould, Kimberley Jones, Lyn R. Griffiths, Dipti Talaulikar, Sanjiv Jain, Josh Tobin, Maher K. Gandhi*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    77 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Risk-stratification of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) requires identification of patients with disease that is not cured, despite initial treatment with R-CHOP. The prognostic importance of the revised International Prognostic Index (R-IPI) and cell of origin of the malignant B cell are established in DLBCL. We aimed to develop a novel, easily applicable, tissue-based prognostic biomarker based on quantification of the tumour microenvironment that is independent of and additive to the R-IPI and cell of origin. Methods: We performed digital hybridisation on the NanoString platform to assess the relation between immune effector and inhibitory (checkpoint) genes in 252 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded DLBCL tissue specimens obtained from patients treated with R-CHOP. We used a tree-based survival model to quantify net antitumoral immunity (using ratios of immune effector to checkpoint genes) and to generate a cutoffas an outcome predictor in 158 of the 252 patients. We validated this model in tissue (n=233) and blood (n=140) samples from two independent cohorts treated with R-CHOP. Findings: T-cell and NK-cell immune effector molecule expression correlated with tumour-associated macrophage and PD-1/PD-L1 axis markers, consistent with malignant B cells triggering a dynamic checkpoint response to adapt to and evade immune surveillance. The ratio of CD4*CD8 to (CD163:CD68[M2])*PD-L1 was better able to stratify overall survival than was any one immune marker or combination, distinguishing groups with disparate 4-year overall survival. 94 (59%) of 158 patients had a score above the cutoffand 4-year overall survival of 92·1% (95% CI 82·9-96·7), and the remaining 64 (41%) patients had a score below the cutoffand 4-year overall survival of 47·0% (32·8-60·5; hazard ratio [HR] 8·3, 95% CI 4·3-17·3; p<0·0001). The CD4*CD8:M2*PD-L1 immune ratio was independent of and added to the R-IPI and cell of origin. Tissue findings in the independent tissue cohort accorded with those in our initial tissue cohort. 139 (60%) of 233 patients had a score above the cutoffand 4-year overall survival of 75·6% (95% CI 64·6-83·6), with the remaining 94 (40%) patients having a score below the cutoff(63·5% [52·5-72·7]; HR 1·9, 95% CI 1·1-3·3; p=0·0067). Interpretation: Ratios of immune effectors to checkpoints augment the cell of origin and R-IPI in DLBCL and are applicable to paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens. These findings might have potential implications for selection of patients for checkpoint blockade within clinical trials. Funding: Leukaemia Foundation of Queensland, Kasey-Anne Oklobdzijato Memorial Fund, the Australasian Leukaemia and Lymphoma Group (Malcolm Broomhead Bequest), the Australian Cancer Research Foundation, and the Cancer Council of Queensland.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)e445-e455
    JournalThe Lancet Haematology
    Volume2
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

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