NASH limits anti-tumour surveillance in immunotherapy-treated HCC

  • Dominik Pfister
  • Nicolás Gonzalo Núñez
  • Roser Pinyol
  • Olivier Govaere
  • Matthias Pinter
  • Marta Szydlowska
  • Revant Gupta
  • Mengjie Qiu
  • Aleksandra Deczkowska
  • Assaf Weiner
  • Florian Müller
  • Ankit Sinha
  • Ekaterina Friebel
  • Thomas Engleitner
  • Daniela Lenggenhager
  • Anja Moncsek
  • Danijela Heide
  • Kristin Stirm
  • Jan Kosla
  • Eleni Kotsiliti
  • Valentina Leone
  • Michael Dudek
  • Suhail Yousuf
  • Donato Inverso
  • Indrabahadur Singh
  • Ana Teijeiro
  • Florian Castet
  • Carla Montironi
  • Philipp K Haber
  • Dina Tiniakos
  • Pierre Bedossa
  • Simon Cockell
  • Ramy Younes
  • Michele Vacca
  • Fabio Marra
  • Jörn M Schattenberg
  • Michael Allison
  • Elisabetta Bugianesi
  • Vlad Ratziu
  • Tiziana Pressiani
  • Antonio D'Alessio
  • Nicola Personeni
  • Lorenza Rimassa
  • Ann K Daly
  • Bernhard Scheiner
  • Katharina Pomej
  • Martha M Kirstein
  • Arndt Vogel
  • Markus Peck-Radosavljevic
  • Florian Hucke
  • Fabian Finkelmeier
  • Oliver Waidmann
  • Jörg Trojan
  • Kornelius Schulze
  • Henning Wege
  • Sandra Koch
  • Arndt Weinmann
  • Marco Bueter
  • Fabian Rössler
  • Alexander Siebenhüner
  • Sara De Dosso
  • Jan-Philipp Mallm
  • Viktor Umansky
  • Manfred Jugold
  • Tom Luedde
  • Andrea Schietinger
  • Peter Schirmacher
  • Brinda Emu
  • Hellmut G Augustin
  • Adrian Billeter
  • Beat Müller-Stich
  • Hiroto Kikuchi
  • Dan G Duda
  • Fabian Kütting
  • Dirk-Thomas Waldschmidt
  • Matthias Philip Ebert
  • Nuh Rahbari
  • Henrik E Mei
  • Axel Ronald Schulz
  • Marc Ringelhan
  • Nisar Malek
  • Stephan Spahn
  • Michael Bitzer
  • Marina Ruiz de Galarreta
  • Amaia Lujambio
  • Jean-Francois Dufour
  • Thomas U Marron
  • Ahmed Kaseb
  • Masatoshi Kudo
  • Yi-Hsiang Huang
  • Nabil Djouder
  • Katharina Wolter
  • Lars Zender
  • Parice N Marche
  • Thomas Decaens
  • David J Pinato
  • Roland Rad
  • Joachim C Mertens
  • Achim Weber
  • Kristian Unger
  • Felix Meissner
  • Susanne Roth
  • Zuzana Macek Jilkova
  • Manfred Claassen
  • Quentin M Anstee
  • Ido Amit
  • Percy Knolle
  • Burkhard Becher
  • Josep M Llovet
  • Mathias Heikenwalder

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) can have viral or non-viral causes1-5. Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is an important driver of HCC. Immunotherapy has been approved for treating HCC, but biomarker-based stratification of patients for optimal response to therapy is an unmet need6,7. Here we report the progressive accumulation of exhausted, unconventionally activated CD8+PD1+ T cells in NASH-affected livers. In preclinical models of NASH-induced HCC, therapeutic immunotherapy targeted at programmed death-1 (PD1) expanded activated CD8+PD1+ T cells within tumours but did not lead to tumour regression, which indicates that tumour immune surveillance was impaired. When given prophylactically, anti-PD1 treatment led to an increase in the incidence of NASH-HCC and in the number and size of tumour nodules, which correlated with increased hepatic CD8+PD1+CXCR6+, TOX+, and TNF+ T cells. The increase in HCC triggered by anti-PD1 treatment was prevented by depletion of CD8+ T cells or TNF neutralization, suggesting that CD8+ T cells help to induce NASH-HCC, rather than invigorating or executing immune surveillance. We found similar phenotypic and functional profiles in hepatic CD8+PD1+ T cells from humans with NAFLD or NASH. A meta-analysis of three randomized phase III clinical trials that tested inhibitors of PDL1 (programmed death-ligand 1) or PD1 in more than 1,600 patients with advanced HCC revealed that immune therapy did not improve survival in patients with non-viral HCC. In two additional cohorts, patients with NASH-driven HCC who received anti-PD1 or anti-PDL1 treatment showed reduced overall survival compared to patients with other aetiologies. Collectively, these data show that non-viral HCC, and particularly NASH-HCC, might be less responsive to immunotherapy, probably owing to NASH-related aberrant T cell activation causing tissue damage that leads to impaired immune surveillance. Our data provide a rationale for stratification of patients with HCC according to underlying aetiology in studies of immunotherapy as a primary or adjuvant treatment.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0028-0836
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 04.2021
PubMed 33762733