Leveraging immune resistance archetypes in solid cancer to inform next-generation anticancer therapies

Kristin G. Anderson, David A. Braun, Aitziber Buqué, Sarah B. Gitto, Jennifer L. Guerriero, Brendan Horton, Bridget P. Keenan, Teresa S. Kim, Abigail Overacre-Delgoffe, Marco Ruella, Todd A. Triplett, Omkara Veeranki, Vivek Verma, Fan Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Anticancer immunotherapies, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors, bispecific antibodies, and chimeric antigen receptor T cells, have improved outcomes for patients with a variety of malignancies. However, most patients either do not initially respond or do not exhibit durable responses due to primary or adaptive/acquired immune resistance mechanisms of the tumor microenvironment. These suppressive programs are myriad, different between patients with ostensibly the same cancer type, and can harness multiple cell types to reinforce their stability. Consequently, the overall benefit of monotherapies remains limited. Cutting-edge technologies now allow for extensive tumor profiling, which can be used to define tumor cell intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of primary and/or acquired immune resistance, herein referred to as features or feature sets of immune resistance to current therapies. We propose that cancers can be characterized by immune resistance archetypes, comprised of five feature sets encompassing known immune resistance mechanisms. Archetypes of resistance may inform new therapeutic strategies that concurrently address multiple cell axes and/or suppressive mechanisms, and clinicians may consequently be able to prioritize targeted therapy combinations for individual patients to improve overall efficacy and outcomes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number006533
JournalJournal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Volume11
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 30 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Open Heart

Keywords

  • cytotoxicity, immunologic
  • gene expression profiling
  • immune evation
  • review
  • tumor microenvironment

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