Primary Resistance to PD-1 Blockade Mediated by JAK1/2 Mutations

DS Shin, JM Zaretsky, H Escuin-Ordinas, A Garcia-Diaz… - Cancer discovery, 2017 - AACR
DS Shin, JM Zaretsky, H Escuin-Ordinas, A Garcia-Diaz, S Hu-Lieskovan, A Kalbasi
Cancer discovery, 2017AACR
Loss-of-function mutations in JAK1/2 can lead to acquired resistance to anti-programmed
death protein 1 (PD-1) therapy. We reasoned that they may also be involved in primary
resistance to anti–PD-1 therapy. JAK1/2-inactivating mutations were noted in tumor biopsies
of 1 of 23 patients with melanoma and in 1 of 16 patients with mismatch repair–deficient
colon cancer treated with PD-1 blockade. Both cases had a high mutational load but did not
respond to anti–PD-1 therapy. Two out of 48 human melanoma cell lines had JAK1/2 …
Abstract
Loss-of-function mutations in JAK1/2 can lead to acquired resistance to anti-programmed death protein 1 (PD-1) therapy. We reasoned that they may also be involved in primary resistance to anti–PD-1 therapy. JAK1/2-inactivating mutations were noted in tumor biopsies of 1 of 23 patients with melanoma and in 1 of 16 patients with mismatch repair–deficient colon cancer treated with PD-1 blockade. Both cases had a high mutational load but did not respond to anti–PD-1 therapy. Two out of 48 human melanoma cell lines had JAK1/2 mutations, which led to a lack of PD-L1 expression upon interferon gamma exposure mediated by an inability to signal through the interferon gamma receptor pathway. JAK1/2 loss-of-function alterations in The Cancer Genome Atlas confer adverse outcomes in patients. We propose that JAK1/2 loss-of-function mutations are a genetic mechanism of lack of reactive PD-L1 expression and response to interferon gamma, leading to primary resistance to PD-1 blockade therapy.
Significance: A key functional result from somatic JAK1/2 mutations in a cancer cell is the inability to respond to interferon gamma by expressing PD-L1 and many other interferon-stimulated genes. These mutations result in a genetic mechanism for the absence of reactive PD-L1 expression, and patients harboring such tumors would be unlikely to respond to PD-1 blockade therapy. Cancer Discov; 7(2); 188–201. ©2016 AACR.
See related commentary by Marabelle et al., p. 128.
This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 115
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