'Invisible immune checkpoint molecule causing resistance to anti-PD1 therapy in HCC

Immune checkpoint inhibitors targeting PD-1/PD-L1 have become standard of care as systemic first-line therapy for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).1 As of today, only antibody-based treatments have been approved to block the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway. A recent study from Tan et al published in Gut2 describes the unexpected finding that lymphocytes from patients with HCC express an alternative spliced isoform of PD-1, which contains an in-frame deletion of 14-amino acids within the exon 2 of PD-1, 42PD-1. Importantly, 42PD-1 does not interact with PD-L1/L2 and most commercially available anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibodies do not recognise 42PD-1. The investigators studied samples from a total of 74 HCC patients including 41 treatment naive patients and 33 patients treated with nivolumab or pembrolizumab and demonstrate that both HCC patients derived CD4+and CD8+ T cells express high amounts of 42PD-1 in contrast to T cell from healthy controls, which barely expressed...
Source: Gut - Category: Gastroenterology Authors: Tags: Gut Commentary Source Type: research