T-cell receptor determinants of response to chemoradiation in locally-advanced HPV16-driven malignancies

Front Oncol. 2024 Jan 3:13:1296948. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1296948. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: The effect of chemoradiation on the anti-cancer immune response is being increasingly acknowledged; however, its clinical implications in treatment responses are yet to be fully understood. Human papillomavirus (HPV)-driven malignancies express viral oncogenic proteins which may serve as tumor-specific antigens and represent ideal candidates for monitoring the peripheral T-cell receptor (TCR) changes secondary to chemoradiotherapy (CRT).

Methods: We performed intra-tumoral and pre- and post-treatment peripheral TCR sequencing in a cohort of patients with locally-advanced HPV16-positive cancers treated with CRT. An in silico computational pipeline was used to cluster TCR repertoire based on epitope-specificity and to predict affinity between these clusters and HPV16-derived epitopes.

Results: Intra-tumoral repertoire diversity, intra-tumoral and post-treatment peripheral CDR3β similarity clustering were predictive of response. In responders, CRT triggered an increase peripheral TCR clonality and clonal relatedness. Post-treatment expansion of baseline peripheral dominant TCRs was associated with response. Responders showed more baseline clustered structures of TCRs maintained post-treatment and displayed significantly more maintained clustered structures. When applying clustering by TCR-specificity methods, responders displayed a higher proportion of intra-tumoral TCRs predicted to recognise HPV16 peptides.

Conclusions: Baseline TCR characteristics and changes in the peripheral T-cell clones triggered by CRT are associated with treatment outcome. Maintenance and boosting of pre-existing clonotypes are key elements of an effective anti-cancer immune response driven by CRT, supporting a paradigm in which the immune system plays a central role in the success of CRT in current standard-of-care protocols.

Keywords: T-cell receptor; anal cancer; cervical cancer; head and neck cancer; human papillomavirus; radiotherapy.

Associated data

  • figshare/10.6084/m9.figshare.6025748.v1

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was undertaken in The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and The Institute of Cancer Research. The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust received a proportion of its funding from the NHS Executive. The CCR4157 trial was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Royal Marsden and Institute of Cancer Research Biomedical Research Centre and the Clinical Research Facility BRC grant nos. A67, B07, B002/ICiCPS3115 and B014. This work was supported by ICR/RMH NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, The Institute of Cancer Research/Royal Marsden Hospital Centre for Translational Immunotherapy, CRUK Head and Neck Program Grant (C7224/A23275), CRIS Foundation and ICR/RM CRUK RadNet Centre of Excellence (C7224/A28724).