Visual Abstract
Single-cell and spatial multimodal technologies have propelled discoveries of the solid tumor microenvironment (TME) molecular features and their correlation with clinical response and resistance to immunotherapy. Computational tools are incessantly being developed to characterize tumor-infiltrating immune cells and to model tumor immune escape. These advances have led to substantial research into T-cell hypofunctional states in the TME and their reinvigoration with T-cell–targeting approaches, including checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs). Until recently, we lacked a high-dimensional picture of the acute myeloid leukemia (AML) TME, including compositional and functional differences in immune cells between disease onset and postchemotherapy or posttransplantation relapse, and the dynamic interplay between immune cells and AML blasts at various maturation stages. AML subgroups with heightened interferon gamma (IFN-γ) signaling were shown to derive clinical benefit from CD123×CD3–bispecific dual-affinity retargeting molecules and CPIs, while being less likely to respond to standard-of-care cytotoxic chemotherapy. In this review, we first highlight recent progress into deciphering immune effector states in AML (including T-cell exhaustion and senescence), oncogenic signaling mechanisms that could reduce the susceptibility of AML cells to T-cell–mediated killing, and the dichotomous roles of type I and II IFN in antitumor immunity. In the second part, we discuss how this knowledge could be translated into opportunities to manipulate the AML TME with the aim to overcome resistance to CPIs and other T-cell immunotherapies, building on recent success stories in the solid tumor field, and we provide an outlook for the future.
Introduction
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a model of highly efficient metastatic spread and is characterized by tremendous molecular, immunological, and clinical heterogeneity.1 The treatment landscape of AML has changed dramatically in recent years.2 However, most patients eventually relapse and have disappointing outcomes, with a 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 10%.3 Checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs) restrain T-cell suppressive signals delivered through cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) and promote antitumor immune responses. Distinct cellular mechanisms underlie CTLA-4 and PD-1 checkpoint blockade, with the former affecting CD4+ T-cell clonal expansion and trafficking, and the latter largely affecting the exhausted CD8+ T-cell compartment.4,5 Patients with certain solid tumor types, including glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer, demonstrate de novo resistance to CPIs, and a substantial proportion of patients with CPI-sensitive solid tumors eventually develop adaptive resistance.4 Although CPIs offer long-term clinical benefit in a large proportion of patients with solid tumors, results in AML, which has historically been considered an immunologically “cold” tumor,6,7 have been less impressive.
Integrative immunogenomic approaches can refine the accuracy of outcome prediction by supporting a more granular stratification of AML within existing European LeukemiaNet (ELN) risk categories.8,9 In particular, immune gene expression profiling of primary bone marrow (BM) samples uncovered novel immune-infiltrated and interferon gamma (IFN-γ)-dominant AML subtypes associated with poor outcome after standard-of-care chemotherapy and with response to immunotherapy with flotetuzumab, a bispecific T-cell engager targeting CD123.9,10 The IFN-dominant gene module in pretreatment BM specimens from patients with immune-infiltrated AML reflected the abundance of IFN-γ signaling; immunoproteasome; myeloid inflammation; inflammatory chemokine; IL-10, PD-L1, and PD-L2 gene expression scores; as well as higher expression of molecules involved in antigen processing and presentation. BM-resident CD8+ T cells from patients with immune-infiltrated AML were polyfunctional, as suggested by their coexpression of intracellular IFN-γ and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α).9
A large-scale study of genotype-immunophenotype correlations across lymphoid and myeloid malignancies identified associations between immune checkpoint ligands and disease subgroups, including expression of PD-L1, ARG1, CD86, and VSIR (VISTA), encoding an inhibitory T-cell checkpoint of the B7 family, in monocytic AML as well as high infiltration of natural killer (NK) and CD8+ T cells in AML with myelodysplastic syndrome–like features.8,11 This observation suggests that the differentiation stage of the blasts may enable AML-specific immune evasion mechanisms. Furthermore, an inflammation-associated gene expression metric has been correlated with reduction in T-cell clonal expansion, increase in CD8+GZMK+ and regulatory T (Treg) cells, and worse clinical outcomes both in children and adults with AML.12
This review will summarize recent discoveries on T-cell functional states in AML and their impact on response to CPIs, bispecific T-cell engagers, and adoptive cell therapies. We discuss how resistance to immunological treatments could be overcome, and provide an outlook for the future.
Advances in defining T-cell–dysfunctional states
Both senescent and exhausted T cells accumulate in the tumor microenvironment (TME), in which they exhibit impaired antitumor functions. Senescent T cells acquire a unique transcriptional profile, downregulate costimulatory molecules (CD27 and CD28), and highly express CD57 and killer cell lectin-like receptor subfamily member 1 (KLRG1).13 Although senescent T cells are in a state of cell cycle arrest, do not proliferate in response to T-cell receptor (TCR) triggering, and manifest defective killing abilities, they produce high amounts of proinflammatory and suppressive cytokines and remain metabolically active.14 Senescent-like CD27−CD28−CD8+ T cells expressing NK markers expand in older individuals and lose the signaling activity of the TCR.15 T-cell exhaustion in tumors is a proxy for tumor antigen-driven T-cell activation and is believed to be a dynamic and gradual state analogous to that elicited by continuous antigen exposure during viral infections.16 Remarkable phenotypic diversity is observed within intratumoral T cells, which can be broadly compartmentalized into memory T cells and exhausted T cells,17 and reside along a continuum of progressively declining T-cell function that spans progenitor exhausted T cells (TPEX),18 GZMK+ predysfunctional or “transitional” T cells (TEX), and early-to-late dysfunctional T cells (Table 1).24 During chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection in mice, TPEX self-renew and exhibit multipotent repopulation capacity, which is governed by sustained expression of MYB.26 In sharp contrast to their CD62L− TPEX and CX3CR1+ or CX3CR1− TEX descendants, a subpopulation of CD62L+ TPEX has been reported to proliferate vigorously and to acquire enhanced potential for effector cell generation in response to CPIs.26 Studies in melanoma-bearing mice identified subsets of stem-like or TPEX and terminally exhausted CD8+ T cells, which differ in gene expression, transcription factor activity, cytokine production, cytolytic function, and epigenetic landscape.27 Importantly, a larger fraction of CD8+ TPEX with a TCF1+PD-1+ phenotype in pretreatment biopsies from patients with advanced melanoma correlated with significantly longer progression-free survival and OS after nivolumab or ipilimumab.16
T-cell compartment . | Subpopulation . | Phenotype/signature genes . | Function . | Other remarks . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Memory T cells (reduced overall clonal expansion) | Stem cell memory T cells19 | TCF1 IL7R CD62L CCR7 | Display increased proliferative capacity and mediate superior antitumor responses compared with known memory populations | Do not exhibit tumor-specific localization Retain the ability to regenerate a vast progeny of effector cells |
Central memory T cells20 | TCF1 IL7R CCR7 | Express lymph node homing receptors and lack immediate effector function, but efficiently stimulate DCs and differentiate into CCR7− effector cells upon secondary stimulation | ||
Effector memory T cells20 | TCF1 IL7R CD62L | Express receptors for migration to inflamed tissues and display rapid production of IFN-γ and immediate effector function | ||
Exhausted T cells (highly clonotypically expanded)17 | TPEX | PD1 CTLA4 LAG3 TOX CD62L TCF1 | Are early dysfunctional T cells A subset of predysfunctional (or “transitional”) T cells is defined by high expression of GZMK Lack effector functions | Can self-renew and differentiate and are a reservoir of TEX cells Are often found in lymph nodes and TLS Responsible for immunotherapy efficacy |
TEX | PD1 CTLA4 LAG3 TIM3 CD39 TOX CXCL13 BCL2L11 | Have impaired cytotoxic function (gradually lose effector functions) | Even if terminally differentiated, TEX can proliferate in an antigen-dependent fashion | |
Tissue-resident memory–like TEX | CD103 HOBIT (ZNF683) | Represent a continuum in the spectrum of TIL phenotypes Have high cytotoxic potential Express high levels of inhibitory molecules | Likely reflect a variation of TEX differentiation in the TME | |
NK-cell receptor–positive TEX | CD8 KLRG1 CD57 Bcl2 LAG3 | Are dysfunctional (ie, have reduced cytotoxicity against autologous AML blasts) | Are more abundant in R/R AML but can also be detected in mice with LCMV infection, in which they may be dependent on the transcription factor Zeb221,22 | |
Stress response state (TSTR)23 | Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells | Stress-related heat shock genes (HSPA1A, HSPA1B); NF-κB signaling molecules | Are highly correlated with IFN-response CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell subsets | Are detectable in situ in the TME across various cancer types (especially those with aggressive phenotypes) Have a potential role in immunotherapy resistance |
T-cell compartment . | Subpopulation . | Phenotype/signature genes . | Function . | Other remarks . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Memory T cells (reduced overall clonal expansion) | Stem cell memory T cells19 | TCF1 IL7R CD62L CCR7 | Display increased proliferative capacity and mediate superior antitumor responses compared with known memory populations | Do not exhibit tumor-specific localization Retain the ability to regenerate a vast progeny of effector cells |
Central memory T cells20 | TCF1 IL7R CCR7 | Express lymph node homing receptors and lack immediate effector function, but efficiently stimulate DCs and differentiate into CCR7− effector cells upon secondary stimulation | ||
Effector memory T cells20 | TCF1 IL7R CD62L | Express receptors for migration to inflamed tissues and display rapid production of IFN-γ and immediate effector function | ||
Exhausted T cells (highly clonotypically expanded)17 | TPEX | PD1 CTLA4 LAG3 TOX CD62L TCF1 | Are early dysfunctional T cells A subset of predysfunctional (or “transitional”) T cells is defined by high expression of GZMK Lack effector functions | Can self-renew and differentiate and are a reservoir of TEX cells Are often found in lymph nodes and TLS Responsible for immunotherapy efficacy |
TEX | PD1 CTLA4 LAG3 TIM3 CD39 TOX CXCL13 BCL2L11 | Have impaired cytotoxic function (gradually lose effector functions) | Even if terminally differentiated, TEX can proliferate in an antigen-dependent fashion | |
Tissue-resident memory–like TEX | CD103 HOBIT (ZNF683) | Represent a continuum in the spectrum of TIL phenotypes Have high cytotoxic potential Express high levels of inhibitory molecules | Likely reflect a variation of TEX differentiation in the TME | |
NK-cell receptor–positive TEX | CD8 KLRG1 CD57 Bcl2 LAG3 | Are dysfunctional (ie, have reduced cytotoxicity against autologous AML blasts) | Are more abundant in R/R AML but can also be detected in mice with LCMV infection, in which they may be dependent on the transcription factor Zeb221,22 | |
Stress response state (TSTR)23 | Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells | Stress-related heat shock genes (HSPA1A, HSPA1B); NF-κB signaling molecules | Are highly correlated with IFN-response CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell subsets | Are detectable in situ in the TME across various cancer types (especially those with aggressive phenotypes) Have a potential role in immunotherapy resistance |
Intratumoral T cells are characterized by a remarkable phenotypic and functional diversity. This gradient of T-cell states has been described mostly for CD8+ TILs residing along a continuum of dysfunction.17,24 The current status of CD4+ T cells in cancer has been reviewed elsewhere.25 HOBIT, homologue of BLIMP1 in T cell; TCF1, T-cell–specific transcription factor 1; TEX cells, terminally exhausted T cells; TILs, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes; TIM3, T-cell immunoglobulin mucin receptor; TLS, tertiary lymphoid structures; TOX, thymocyte selection–associated high mobility group box protein.
By applying longitudinal single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing, novel TEX subsets have been revealed in LCMV-infected mice, including a distinct T-cell population coexpressing NK markers and high levels of Tox, Bcl2, and Lag3, that is dependent on the transcription factor Zeb2 and retains superior functional and proliferative capacity compared with other intermediate TEX states.21,22 Treatment of LCMV-infected mice with PD-1 blocking agents substantially altered the frequency of TEX and induced their differentiation to functionally intermediate TEX states.21 Interestingly, addition of interleukin-2 (IL-2) to PD-1 immunotherapy improved responses and expanded stem-like PD-1+TCF1+CD8+ T cells resembling highly functional effector CD8+ T cells.28 These findings suggest that TPEX are not fate-locked into the exhaustion program and warrant the evaluation of synergistic cytokine effects in future clinical trials of AML and other cancers.
A novel cellular stress state (TSTR) characterized by unique expression of stress-related heat shock genes, including HSP1A1 and HSPA1B, has been uncovered in a recent study integrating single-cell and spatial transcriptomes from 308 048 high-quality T cells across 16 cancer types.23 Notably, TSTR predicted inferior clinical outcomes in 6 independent solid tumor immunotherapy cohorts and were enriched in mutation-associated neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells in tumors from patients with no major pathological response.23 It would be of great interest to explore the prognostic and/or predictive relevance of an analogous TSTR functional state for AML.
Cancer cell–intrinsic signaling and immune dysfunction
Oncogenic drivers
In addition to T-cell–intrinsic mechanisms, the immune milieu of solid tumors can be shaped by cancer-cell–intrinsic features, including genetic aberrations in oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, or DNA damage repair genes, which affect CPI sensitivity.29,30,TP53 is the most commonly altered tumor suppressor gene in cancer. In epithelial tumors, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes can recognize autologous TP53 neoantigens, pointing to the immunogenicity of TP53 hotspot mutations and providing a biological rationale for TP53-specific immunotherapies.31 In this respect, bispecific antibodies targeting a common TP53 neoantigen (arginine-to-histidine substitution at codon 175; R175H) bound to HLA-A∗02:01 on the cell surface can activate T cells and promote tumor cell lysis both in vitro and in vivo.32
TP53 abnormalities occur in 8% to 10% of de novo AML and portend a high risk of primary induction failure and relapse and a dismal prognosis.33 AML cells carrying TP53 missense mutations express gene signatures of TP53 inactivation, suggesting dominant-negative activity without evidence of neomorphic gain-of-function capacity.34 AML cases with TP53 mutations from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort express higher levels of cytolytic molecules in contrast to the common driver mutations FLT3 and NPM1, which preferentially occur in AML samples with low cytolytic activity (Table 2).8 Both de novo and secondary TP53-mutated AML harbor an inherently immunosuppressive TME, with expanded Treg cells and myeloid-derived suppressor cells, decreased NK cells, enhanced IFN-γ signaling, and increased PD-L1 in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs).35,36 Importantly, mouse double minute 2 inhibition in patient–derived AML cells counteracts immune evasion by enhancing TNF–related apoptosis-inducing ligand receptor 1 and 2 and major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) expression in a TP53-dependent manner, thereby restoring AML susceptibility to allogeneic T-cell–mediated cytotoxicity.40 An interesting finding that could be relevant in the context of AML therapies that target phagocytosis such as monoclonal antibodies blocking CD47, a “don’t eat me” signal overexpressed on AML blasts and leukemia stem cells (LSCs),41 is that TP53 loss in lymphoma cells modulates macrophage phagocytic capacity by enhancing the biogenesis of PD-L1+ extracellular vesicles from tumor B cells.42 Notably, a phase 1b trial of azacitidine and magrolimab in frontline treatment of TP53-mutant AML has shown durable responses and encouraging OS, although immune correlates of success have not yet been reported.43
Study . | Driver mutation . | Disease . | Immune correlates . |
---|---|---|---|
Vadakekolathu et al9 | RUNX1, TP53 | AML | Higher TIS, IFN signaling, and cytotoxicity scores relative to patients with favorable or intermediate-risk AML |
Vadakekolathu et al35 | TP53 | AML | High expression of IFNG, FOXP3, immune checkpoints, markers of immune senescence, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt and NF-κB signaling intermediates |
Sallman et al36 | TP53 | AML | Reduced numbers of BM-infiltrating OX40+ cytotoxic T cells and helper T cells Decreased ICOS+ and 4-1BB+ NK cells Expansion of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and Treg cells Increase of PD-L1 expression in HSCs |
Dufva et al8 | TP53 | AML | High cytolytic score (especially in MDS-like cases) and high expression of PD-L1 |
NPM1 | AML | Increased expression of VISTA and ULBP1 (NKG2D ligand) | |
RUNX1 | AML | High expression of B-cell–associated markers (BTN2A2, SLAMF7, and LY9) in addition to HLA II | |
Abbas et al37 | chr7/7q loss | AML | Higher Treg and CD8+ T-cell infiltration, downregulation of IFN-γ pathway genes, and worse survival compared with AML cases with intact chr7/7q |
Yeaton et al38 | TET2 | AML | Emergence of inflammatory monocyte-like cells during progression to myeloid transformation |
Notarangelo et al39 | IDH1/IDH2 | Human IDH-mutant cancers | Acute but reversible inhibition of CD8+ T-cell proliferation, cytotoxicity, and IFN-γ signaling by oncometabolite d-2HG |
Study . | Driver mutation . | Disease . | Immune correlates . |
---|---|---|---|
Vadakekolathu et al9 | RUNX1, TP53 | AML | Higher TIS, IFN signaling, and cytotoxicity scores relative to patients with favorable or intermediate-risk AML |
Vadakekolathu et al35 | TP53 | AML | High expression of IFNG, FOXP3, immune checkpoints, markers of immune senescence, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt and NF-κB signaling intermediates |
Sallman et al36 | TP53 | AML | Reduced numbers of BM-infiltrating OX40+ cytotoxic T cells and helper T cells Decreased ICOS+ and 4-1BB+ NK cells Expansion of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and Treg cells Increase of PD-L1 expression in HSCs |
Dufva et al8 | TP53 | AML | High cytolytic score (especially in MDS-like cases) and high expression of PD-L1 |
NPM1 | AML | Increased expression of VISTA and ULBP1 (NKG2D ligand) | |
RUNX1 | AML | High expression of B-cell–associated markers (BTN2A2, SLAMF7, and LY9) in addition to HLA II | |
Abbas et al37 | chr7/7q loss | AML | Higher Treg and CD8+ T-cell infiltration, downregulation of IFN-γ pathway genes, and worse survival compared with AML cases with intact chr7/7q |
Yeaton et al38 | TET2 | AML | Emergence of inflammatory monocyte-like cells during progression to myeloid transformation |
Notarangelo et al39 | IDH1/IDH2 | Human IDH-mutant cancers | Acute but reversible inhibition of CD8+ T-cell proliferation, cytotoxicity, and IFN-γ signaling by oncometabolite d-2HG |
d-2HG, d-2-hydroxyglutarate; ICOS, inducible T-cell costimulator; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; TIS, tumor inflammation signature.
However, a complete evaluation of safety and efficacy of azacitidine and venetoclax, with or without magrolimab, in patients with untreated AML (ENHANCE-3; ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT05079230) has shown a CR rate of 39.7% in the magrolimab-containing arm and 42.9% in the control arm, leading to study termination.116 These negative results underscore the existing challenges in enhancing outcomes for patients unfit for intensive induction chemotherapy and emphasize the necessity for immunotherapy agents with improved safety and efficacy profiles.
The epigenetic regulator ten-eleven translocation 2 (TET2) is mutated in 10% to 30% of AML cases. In mice carrying a patient–derived TET2 missense mutation, progression to myeloid transformation has been correlated with the emergence of inflammatory monocyte-like cells,38 whose transcriptional signature independently predicted shorter OS in a broad AML validation cohort. Exploring whether a proinflammatory TME affects response of TET2-mutated AML to CPIs could have promising translational potential.
Isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH1) mutations, which are identified in 6% to 10% of patients with AML and impart a poor prognosis,44 constrain T-cell accumulation and expression of IFN-γ–inducible chemokines in patients with lower-grade glioma.45 Mechanistically, the oncometabolite d-2-hydroxyglutarate, which is produced by cancers with gain-of-function mutations in both IDH1 and IDH2, alters glycolysis in CD8+ T cells and reversibly inhibits their proliferation, antitumor killing capacity, and expression of IFN-γ gene programs.39 These findings highlight a potential role for specific inhibitors of mutant IDH in improving immunotherapy efficacy through the removal of immunosuppressive d-2-hydroxyglutarate.
Inferred chr7/7q loss correlates with higher Treg and CD8+ T-cell infiltration, downregulation of IFN-γ pathway genes, and worse survival compared with AML cases with intact chr7/7q.37 Finally, an immunogenomic analysis of TCGA cohorts and 8 clinical trials of anti–PD-1/PD-L1 therapy in >1000 patients with solid tumors has uncovered that homozygous deletion of 9p21.3 (9p21 loss), a genomic defect occurring in ∼13% of all cancers and eliminating CDKN2A/B tumor suppressors, confers “cold” tumor-immune phenotypes, with reduced abundance of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, diminished immune-cell trafficking/activation, decreased rate of PD-L1 positivity, activation of immunosuppressive signaling, and primary resistance to CPIs.46 A “response score” incorporating 9p21 loss, PD-L1 expression, and tumor mutational burden in pretreatment tumors was shown to outperform PD-L1, tumor mutational burden, and their combination in identifying patients who are likely to achieve sustained response after CPI treatment. Furthermore, 9p21.3 deletions encompassing a cluster of 16 type I IFN genes have been associated with dendritic cell (DC) and CD8+ T-cell dysfunction, derepression of solid tumor metastasis, and immunotherapy resistance.47 Notably, homozygous deletions of type I IFN genes are very rare in AML (<1% of patients who are queried), as indicated by our interrogation of 1661 cases from the TCGA,48 Beat-AML,49 and TARGET-AML50 cohorts accessed through the cBioPortal for Cancer Genomics (30 April 2023). Determining whether AML with KMT2A-MLLT3 fusion caused by t(9;11) is immunogenetically distinct could be an interesting avenue for future research.
Type I/II IFN signaling
IFNs are pleiotropic cytokines implicated in cancer immunosurveillance and immunotherapy response, although also exerting protumorigenic effects in a context-dependent manner.51 Melanoma tumors harboring genomic defects in type II (IFN-γ) pathway genes and amplification of IFN-γ pathway inhibitors SOCS1 and PIAS4 may be resistant to anti–CTLA-4 and anti–PD-1 immunotherapy.52,53 The relationship between IFN-γ signaling and CPI responses may indeed be more complex than currently appreciated, as suggested by a meta-analysis of 29 studies encompassing 2154 patients with solid tumors from 7 different tissues.54 Tumor-intrinsic mutations of core IFN-γ signaling genes, including JAK1, JAK2, IFNGR1, IFNGR2, and STAT1, correlated with a greater likelihood of responding to CPIs. IFN-γ signaling gene alterations had opposing effects in vitro, with tumor screens identifying positive selection for alterations in IFN-γ pathway genes in the setting of host immune pressure. Inflammatory and IFN-γ gene signatures, suggestive of preexisting anti-AML immune responses, are associated with poor outcome across all ELN2017 stratifications.9 Although IFN-γ–related RNA profiles are good predictors of response to CPIs in solid tumors as well as in AML,7,9,55 prolonged IFN-γ signaling in tumor cells has been shown to promote resistance to genotoxic damage through STAT1-dependent molecular circuits.56 Whether pretreatment IFN-γ signaling gene alterations in tumor cells preclude or favor responses of AML to CPIs remains to be conclusively established.
Genes typically associated with type I IFN signaling are largely detected in cancer cells and their tonic expression is maintained by OAS1.57,58 Intact type I IFN signaling in cancer cells mediates resistance to CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity after genotoxic damage with or without anti–PD-L1 immunotherapy.59 Responsiveness to type I IFN in peripheral immune cells, that is, higher levels of basal IFN-I–stimulated proteins, is epigenetically predetermined and correlates with solid tumor progression after anti-PD1 immunotherapy.60 Conversely, T cells from “low responders” to type I IFN are enriched in pathways for immune effector functions, RNA metabolism and oxidative phosphorylation, and demonstrate a reduced exhaustion signature.
Interrogation of TCGA solid tumors has indicated that immune dysfunction is associated with high IFN resistance signatures in cancer cells relative to a nonoverlapping set of IFN-stimulated genes that are preferentially expressed by immune cells, such as T cells, NK cells, and macrophages.58 Intriguingly, the establishment of acquired CPI resistance correlated with epigenetic features of IFN-associated “inflammatory memory,” that is, with prolonged chromatin accessibility after signal termination, in Res 499 melanoma tumors.58 Abolishing type I IFN signaling through knock out of IFN α and β receptor subunit 1 (Ifnar1) in cancer cells increased immune-cell expression of IFN-stimulated genes in myeloid cells, DCs, NK cells, and CD8+ T cells and restored the antitumor response.58 Orthogonal single-cell transcriptome analyses predicted strong interactions between CD8+ T cells and proinflammatory type 3 DCs,61 and highlighted an enhanced transition of CD8+ T cells to an effector-like state. This elegant body of work suggests that inhibition of type I IFN signaling in cancer cells could antagonize CPI resistance through remodeling of inflammatory epigenetic states and feedback modulation of immune cells. Further discovery work on whether inducibility of type I IFN genes correlates with immune function may offer potential therapeutic relevance by allowing the identification of molecularly defined AML subgroups unlikely to benefit from CPIs (Figure 1). A systematic evaluation of inherent AML blast responsiveness to type I IFN might also reveal the molecular basis for AML cell susceptibility and/or resistance to immune attack.62 Future prospective studies in AML should ascertain whether loss of IFN-γ signaling pathway genes, including JAK1 and JAK2,53 affects immunotherapy responses by limiting the release of T-cell–attracting chemokines and/or the upregulation of antigen processing machinery genes. Despite the complexity and rapidly evolving scenario of the cancer genome–immunophenotype relationships, these examples illustrate that select cancer-cell–intrinsic features and downstream immunoregulatory pathways, including primary and acquired insensitivity to IFNs, affect immunotherapy response. This knowledge should inform the development of novel immune interventions tailored to individual patients.
Impact of T-cell exhaustion and senescence on therapy response
Chemotherapy
How T-cell derangement affects AML response to standard-of-care chemotherapy, molecularly targeted therapies, and immunotherapies is incompletely understood. Patients with prolonged first complete remission (CR) (lasting >5 years) have a TME at presentation that is relatively less immunosuppressive and T cells that express lower levels of activation- and exhaustion-associated genes.63 A landmark scRNA-seq study highlighted quantitative defects in T/NK cells, an increase in Treg cells, and predominance of T/NK cells after chemotherapy in a relatively small number of patients with AML.64 Another study using high-dimensional flow cytometry has shown that the transcriptional profile of CD8+ T cells diverges between chemotherapy responders and nonresponders, with the former patient group showing upregulation of costimulatory molecules, downregulation of apoptotic and inhibitory pathways, and overall reversal of CD8+ gene expression signatures to a healthy-like pattern.65 A silenced gene expression profile in CD8+ T cells may correlate with longer OS in patients with ELN favorable-risk AML, an observation that establishes previously unappreciated links between clinically validated cytogenetic abnormalities and the AML-immune TME.66 We have shown that NK-like CD8+ T cells with transcriptional features of immune effector dysfunction (IED) are more abundant in patients with TP53 and RUNX1 mutations and predict significantly shorter relapse-free survival and OS.55 These CD8+CD57+KLRG1+ senescent-like T cells were impaired in their ability to lyse autologous AML blasts when activated with an anti–CD33/CD3 bispecific T-cell engaging antibody construct. TPEX with a GZMK+IL7R+CD8+ phenotype clonally expand in complete responders to induction chemotherapy compared with in nonresponders, and correlate with prolonged OS.67 T cells with NK-like (KLRG1+), effector memory (EM1), and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL11) transcriptional profiles may be more abundant in relapsed/refractory (R/R) AML compared with in newly diagnosed AML.68 The analysis of gene regulatory networks associated with the aforementioned T-cell clusters revealed high activity of NFYB and STAT1 regulons, consistent with enhanced longevity and type I IFN production. The latter finding was also confirmed by in silico prediction of cytokine signaling activity.68 In agreement with previous reports,9 higher CD8 gene scores correlated with worse survival in treatment-naive TCGA AML cases.68
T-cell immunotherapies
Although conserved TME subtypes have been shown to correlate with immunotherapy efficacy in multiple solid tumor types,70 little is known concerning biomarkers of immunotherapy success and/or failure in AML (Table 3). A clinical trial of azacitidine and nivolumab reported an overall response rate of 33% vs 20% in historical controls treated on hypomethylating agent–based clinical trials, with pretherapy BM CD3+ and CD8+ T-cell frequencies being significantly associated with improved overall response rate.72 Responses were largely measured in patients who had received only 1 or 2 lines of prior salvage therapy, suggesting that T-cell dysfunction associated with AML progression and/or extensive treatment with chemotherapy negatively affects response to CPIs. In nonresponders, Th17-like T cells coexpressing RORγt and inducible T-cell costimulator were expanded on treatment.
Study . | Treatment . | Disease . | Number of patients, N . | Immune correlates . | Trial ID . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davids et al71 | Ipilimumab | Post-HSCT relapse | 28 | Infiltration of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, decreased activation of Treg cells, and expansion of effector T cells in responders | NCT01822509 |
Daver et al72 | Azacitidine + nivolumab | R/R AML | 70 | Pretherapy BM CD3+ and CD8+ T cells associate with improved ORR Th17 cell expansion in nonresponders | NCT02397720 |
Vadakekolathu et al9 and Uy et al10 | Flotetuzumab | R/R AML | 88 (15 with TP53 mutations) | TIS higher at baseline in responders | NCT02152956 |
Zeidner et al73 | High-dose cytarabine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 37 | Higher frequency of CD8+ TPEX expressing TCF-1 at baseline in responders | NCT02768792 |
Abbas et al37 | Azacitidine + nivolumab | R/R AML | 8 | Higher abundance of CD8+GZMK+TCF7+ T cells in responders Loss of chr7/7q associated with NR | NCT02397720 |
Goswami et al74 | Decitabine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 10 | irAEs linked to clonal expansions of CD8+PD1+ effector T cells | NCT02996474 |
Rutella et al55 | Azacitidine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 33 | Dysfunctional NK-like CD8+ T cells associated with NR to pembrolizumab | NCT02845297 |
Rimando et al75 | Azacitidine + pembrolizumab High-dose cytarabine + pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed and R/R AML | 31 18 | Differentiated blasts (promonocytic profile) expanded in responders | NCT02845297 NCT02768792 |
Garcia et al76 | Decitabine + ipilimumab | R/R AML (after HSCT and HSCT naive) | 54 | Immune activation (irAEs) associated with survival benefit | NCT02890329 |
Penter et al77 | Decitabine + ipilimumab | R/R AML (after HSCT and HSCT naive) | 18 | Altered CD4+ T-cell gene expression after ipilimumab. Increased infiltration with antigen–experienced resident memory T cells in leukemia cutis samples from responders. | NCT02890329 |
Study . | Treatment . | Disease . | Number of patients, N . | Immune correlates . | Trial ID . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davids et al71 | Ipilimumab | Post-HSCT relapse | 28 | Infiltration of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, decreased activation of Treg cells, and expansion of effector T cells in responders | NCT01822509 |
Daver et al72 | Azacitidine + nivolumab | R/R AML | 70 | Pretherapy BM CD3+ and CD8+ T cells associate with improved ORR Th17 cell expansion in nonresponders | NCT02397720 |
Vadakekolathu et al9 and Uy et al10 | Flotetuzumab | R/R AML | 88 (15 with TP53 mutations) | TIS higher at baseline in responders | NCT02152956 |
Zeidner et al73 | High-dose cytarabine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 37 | Higher frequency of CD8+ TPEX expressing TCF-1 at baseline in responders | NCT02768792 |
Abbas et al37 | Azacitidine + nivolumab | R/R AML | 8 | Higher abundance of CD8+GZMK+TCF7+ T cells in responders Loss of chr7/7q associated with NR | NCT02397720 |
Goswami et al74 | Decitabine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 10 | irAEs linked to clonal expansions of CD8+PD1+ effector T cells | NCT02996474 |
Rutella et al55 | Azacitidine + pembrolizumab | R/R AML | 33 | Dysfunctional NK-like CD8+ T cells associated with NR to pembrolizumab | NCT02845297 |
Rimando et al75 | Azacitidine + pembrolizumab High-dose cytarabine + pembrolizumab | Newly diagnosed and R/R AML | 31 18 | Differentiated blasts (promonocytic profile) expanded in responders | NCT02845297 NCT02768792 |
Garcia et al76 | Decitabine + ipilimumab | R/R AML (after HSCT and HSCT naive) | 54 | Immune activation (irAEs) associated with survival benefit | NCT02890329 |
Penter et al77 | Decitabine + ipilimumab | R/R AML (after HSCT and HSCT naive) | 18 | Altered CD4+ T-cell gene expression after ipilimumab. Increased infiltration with antigen–experienced resident memory T cells in leukemia cutis samples from responders. | NCT02890329 |
irAEs, immune-related adverse events; NR, no response; ORR, overall response rate; TCF-1, T-cell factor 1; TIS, tumor inflammation signature.
In the recent CP-MGD006-01 clinical trial, 47% (7 of 15) of patients with R/R AML and TP53 abnormalities derived benefit from flotetuzumab immunotherapy and had a significantly higher tumor inflammation signature, FOXP3, and CD8 gene expression scores at baseline compared with nonresponders,35 likely reflecting an IFN-γ–driven TME.7,78 In line with this observation, loss of TP53 correlates with enhanced expression of immune checkpoints and effector T-cell–associated genes, including IFN-γ and CXCL9, in lung adenocarcinoma and with improved responses to CPI treatment.79 In contrast, TP53R172H gain-of-function mutations in pancreatic tumors drive the recruitment of immunosuppressive CD11b+Ly6G+ neutrophils, which promote resistance to combination CD40 immunotherapy and chemotherapy.80 Further studies should dissect the functional state of BM-infiltrating neutrophils in TP53-mutated AML, both in patients who are treatment naive and after immunotherapy, also in light of recent evidence supporting a key role for Sellhigh neutrophils in mediating response of lung cancer to T-cell–targeting approaches.81 Intriguingly, anti-OX40 antibodies might elicit neutrophils with a distinct antitumorigenic, activated phenotype in mice with melanoma.82
CTLA-4 inhibition with ipilimumab in relapse of AML after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and other hematological malignancies induces responses in approximately one-third of patients, with an acceptable safety profile.71,76 Correlative analyses revealed upregulation of CD8A and PRF1 in tissue biopsies, decrease of circulating Treg cells, and increase of T-cell–attracting chemokines in association with clinical response. The Experimental Therapeutics Clinical Trials Network (ETCTN) 9204 trial demonstrated that ipilimumab can induce regression of post-HSCT relapsed AML, possibly through recruitment of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells to leukemic sites.71,77 However, immune-related adverse events, including 1 death, were observed in 6 patients (21%) and graft-versus-host disease precluding further administration of ipilimumab was documented in 4 patients (14%). Integrative transcriptomic analyses of clinical samples from the ETCTN/Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (CTEP) 10026 study testing the combination of decitabine and ipilimumab for AML/myelodysplastic syndrome either after HSCT or in the HSCT-naive setting unveiled a strong association between a high baseline ratio of T-to-AML cells and response, and showed evidence of immune activation after ipilimumab exposure.77 In responders, including patients with leukemia cutis, CD8+ T cells were recruited to extramedullary sites,83 which harbored ZNF683+ antigen–experienced tissue-resident memory T cells. These findings suggest that ipilimumab may counteract the establishment of protective, antiapoptotic extramedullary AML niches.1
A first-in-human clinical trial of pembrolizumab and decitabine for R/R AML has identified changes in TCR sequences and immune transcriptomes of patients who develop immune-related adverse events.74 Clonal expansions occurred at irAE onset and largely involved CD8+ effector memory T cells with high expression of PD-1 and transcriptional features reflective of an activation/cytotoxic state. Another study leveraging paired scRNA-seq and TCR profiling of BM samples in R/R AML has documented TCR repertoire expansion and higher abundance of stem-like CD8+GZMK+TCF7+ T cells in responders to azacitidine and nivolumab and in patients having a stable disease.37 In contrast, lack of response to nivolumab was correlated with TCR repertoire contraction and with inferred loss of chr7/7q in the malignant cells. One patient who responded to immunotherapy had an expansion of mucosal-associated invariant T cells after treatment. Importantly, mucosal-associated invariant cytotoxic T lymphocytes displayed the highest fraction of expanded clones, suggesting that CD8+ cells in AML can be effectively reinvigorated by CPIs. Interestingly, a Th1-like state in pretreatment BMs correlated with better outcomes, highlighting a previously unappreciated role for CD4+ T cells in mediating response of AML to CPIs.84 We showed that IED multigene signatures encompassing CD8/NK markers correlate with resistance to pembrolizumab, pointing to T-cell exhaustion and senescence as targetable circuits to overcome immune dysfunction.55 IED scores also correlated with shorter OS in patients with melanoma who received no previous systemic therapy, as well as with lack of response to CPI treatement,55 suggesting that AML may share immunological hallmarks with solid tumor types.
Deconvolution of transcriptomic data from >1000 pediatric and adult patients with AML has allowed the establishment of a novel cellular hierarchy framework from single-cell reference profiles of leukemia stem, progenitor, and mature cell types.85 Leukemia hierarchy composition varied across functional and genomic subtypes of AML and was associated with response to chemotherapy, survival, and drug sensitivity profiles of investigational targeted therapies. Genes predicting shorter survival were enriched for HSC-specific programs, whereas genes associated with longer survival were enriched for granulocyte-macrophage progenitor–specific programs. By relapse, malignancies in most patients were classified as primitive with significant expansion of total leukemia stem and progenitor cell populations and quiescent leukemia stem and progenitor cells. Recent observations indicate that AML stem cell hierarchies could also affect response to CPIs. Compared with nonresponders, patients achieving CR to pembrolizumab in combination with either azacitidine86 or high-dose cytarabine73 had higher inferred proportions of differentiated AML blasts, including cells with a promonocyte-like transcriptional profile.75 Conversely, AML blasts from nonresponders had higher stemness scores at baseline. Finally, CPI efficacy could be improved by increasing NK recognition of AML targets. LSCs lack expression of NKG2D ligands, which is reversed by genetic or pharmacological inhibition of PARP1.87,88 Importantly, a stimulatory DC–NK axis has been associated with melanoma response to CPIs and with prolonged OS.89
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells
CAR T cells are genetically modified autologous T cells equipped with a synthetic antigen-binding domain and additional costimulatory domains, enabling MHC-independent target recognition.90 In 2011, second-generation CAR T cells targeting CD19, which is expressed in B-cell malignancies, emerged as the lead paradigm for engineered T-cell therapies in cancer.91 However, CAR T-cell therapy is challenging in AML, owing to lack of an ideal target and concerns over prolonged myelosuppression.92 AML antigens, which are not significantly expressed on normal BM progenitor populations, such as B7-H3,93 are being evaluated with the aim to minimize hematopoietic toxicity. A high-resolution single-cell expression approach has identified colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor and CD86 as candidate targets for CAR T-cell therapy, with minimal off-target toxicity in preclinical models of AML.94
Novel insights into the basis of clinical resistance to CAR T cells are surfacing. CAR T-cell exhaustion has been proposed as a mechanism of tumor escape in patients with large B-cell lymphoma.95 Failure to achieve an early molecular response to CD19 CAR T cells has been associated with CD8+ T-cell exhaustion and high frequency of LAG3+TIM3+CAR+CD8+ T cells.96 Chronically stimulated mesothelin-directed CD8+ CAR T cells upregulate exhaustion markers and acquire a dysfunctional phenotype with high levels of NK receptors and checkpoint molecules.97 Furthermore, genes upregulated in CAR T cells collected on day 28 after infusion partially overlapped with genes expressed by intermediate and terminally exhausted T cells from LCMV-infected mice. Disruption of the transcription factors ID3 and SOX4 using CRISPR–CRISPR-associated protein 9 translated into a reduction in the frequency of dysfunctional NK-like T cells compared with wild-type cells and into enhanced tumor killing.97 In this respect, in AML-bearing mice, pretreatment of AML cells with hypomethylating agents has been shown to augment CD123 expression and to expand CTLA-4neg anti-CD123 CAR T cells with superior cytotoxic activity.98 This study suggests that epigenetic modifiers could be combined with CD123-targeting CAR T cells for AML treatment.
Immune landscape of AML relapsing after allogeneic HSCT
Treatment of relapse of AML after HSCT remains a challenge. Only 20% of patients who respond to further chemotherapy achieve long-term remissions with a second HSCT or with chemotherapy followed by donor lymphocyte infusions.3 AML blasts at relapse express low/undetectable MHC-II, ultimately favoring immune escape.99-101 In this respect, flotetuzumab may reactivate alloreactive T cells by upregulating MHC-II on AML cells through local release of IFN-γ.102 Inhibitory receptors (IRs) and other immune-related genes are more highly expressed on purified AML blasts from patients with post-HSCT relapse compared with those from patients with postchemotherapy relapse,101 highlighting the potential for CPIs to reinvigorate T cells and restore beneficial anti-AML immune responses also in this setting, as further discussed hereafter. In patients with AML relapsing after a long phase of post-HSCT clinical remission, functionally impaired but leukemia-reactive CD8+ T cells expressing IRs CTLA-4 and TIM-3 accumulate in the TME.103 Importantly, the exhausted phenotype of IR+ T cells could be partly reverted by in vitro exposure to high doses of IL-2, with T cells recovering their polyfunctionality (IFN-γ and TNF-α secretion) but not the ability to produce IL-2.103
It is now established that tumor cells impose metabolic constraints on T cells through glucose depletion and generation of large amounts of lactate and other immunosuppressive byproducts in the TME.104 In this respect, blood T cells isolated from patients with post-HSCT relapse of AML exhibit reduced glycolysis and IFN-γ production compared with matched specimens collected at time of disease remission.105 AML-derived lactic acid negatively affected T-cell–mediated control of AML in a humanized MOLM-13 xenograft model. T-cell dysfunction was reversed after in vitro treatment of CD8+ T cells with sodium bicarbonate.105 A synergism between sorafenib and donor lymphocyte infusions has been documented in patients with FLT3-ITD+ AML who relapse after HSCT.106 Serum IL-15 and IFN-γ levels, as well as blast IL15 and IRF7 messenger RNA, were increased in patients who achieved a complete hematological remission. Concomitantly, metabolic rewiring of blood CD8+ T cells was documented.106 This study suggests that sorafenib might promote a strong graft-versus-AML effect in patients with FLT3-ITD+ AML relapse after HSCT, who would otherwise have a dismal prognosis. Finally, machine learning–informed analyses of longitudinal, paired BM samples have revealed novel intriguing associations between proinflammatory signaling and AML progression, including overexpression of CD6, which encodes a lymphoid–associated surface glycoprotein involved in immune synapse formation, in adult patients at time of relapse.107
Conclusions and perspectives
CPI therapy has been particularly challenging in AML. However, recent advances in multimodal omics technologies have considerably deepened our knowledge of the dynamic cellular interactions at the AML immune interface, highlighting both AML-associated and conserved, pan-cancer pathways that could be modified to overcome immune resistance. We propose that immune gene expression profiling be integrated with clinically validated prognosticators, including ELN risk category, 17-gene LSC score, and molecular lesions (TP53, RUNX1, IDH1/2, and TET2 mutational status), to accurately stratify AML into subgroups with substantially different survival probabilities (Figure 1). Patients with an IFN-γ–dominant, immune-enriched TME could be allocated immunotherapies that aim to reinvigorate dysfunctional T cells, including T-cell engagers and CPIs. Conversely, patients with a “cold,” immune-depleted transcriptional profile could benefit from other therapeutic strategies, such as increasing T-cell trafficking to the BM TME and/or vaccines, adoptive T-cell transfer, and allogeneic HSCT. Immunotherapies targeting immunological hallmarks, such as type I (tumor-cell intrinsic) and type II (immune-cell intrinsic) IFN signaling, and combinatorial approaches incorporating CPIs and molecularly targeted agents that might enhance T-cell–mediated anti-AML activity such as venetoclax108,109 should be explored in future AML clinical trials. It will also be essential to identify and validate immune correlates of response, resistance, and toxicity in patients with AML who are treated with CAR T cells, to devise strategies to antagonize CAR T-cell exhaustion and senescence, and to neutralize metabolic barriers in the TME.110
The observation that chemotherapy reduces the expression of T-cell checkpoints111 raises important questions regarding optimal timing of immunotherapy and leads to the conjecture that CPIs could be more effective as a first-line treatment option rather than after multiagent chemotherapy and/or HSCT. Recent data showing an increase of IED scores after cytotoxic chemotherapy, irrespective of the achievement of CR,55 lend additional credence to the concept that immunotherapy, either alone or in combination with orthogonal cytoreduction strategies,112 could yield superior results if patients were treated earlier in their disease course rather than in the R/R setting. Further research is needed to elucidate whether chemotherapy-induced changes of the immune TME, including heightened inflammation and senescence, affect response to CPIs and other immunotherapeutic modalities. Studies addressing the intricate balance between antitumor immunity and type I/II IFN signaling, and whether an epigenetically poised state of responsiveness to IFN-I favors AML resistance to CPIs by constraining T-cell function, are also warranted.
In conclusion, broader adoption of systems-level approaches, including spatial transcriptomics,113 underpinned by machine learning and advanced computational pipelines,114 and responsible sharing of immunotherapy clinical trial and biomarker data115 will shed further light onto T-cell functional states and their coordinated changes under immune selection pressure in the AML TME. The collection of pretreatment, on-treatment, and postprogression BM samples should complement clinical efforts, because the availability of longitudinal specimens would enable high-dimensional analyses of response in relation to immune evolutionary dynamics, and potentially suggest personalized treatment options.
Acknowledgments
J.V. and S.R. are supported by the John and Lucille van Geest Foundation and by Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology.
Authorship
Contribution: S.R. wrote the manuscript; and J.V. and S.R. reviewed and/or revised the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: S.R. reports institutional research grants from MacroGenics Inc (Rockville, MD), Kura Oncology (San Diego, CA), and Wugen (St Louis, MO) outside the submitted work; and has a patent (Bispecific CD123×CD3 Diabodies for the Treatment of Hematological Malignancies [Davidson JK, Church S, Rutella S; US20210395374A1]) assigned to Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, United Kingdom. J.V. declares no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Sergio Rutella, John van Geest Cancer Research Centre, Nottingham Trent University, College Dr, Clifton Campus, Nottingham NG11 8NS, United Kingdom; email: sergio.rutella@ntu.ac.uk.
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal