Investigator

Julian Marin-Acevedo

Thoracic Oncologist · Indiana University, Medical Oncology

JMJulian Marin-Acev…
Papers(1)
Differential Infiltra…
Collaborators(10)
Martin McCarterSusanne ArnoldAakrosh RatanAik TanCraig ShriverDaniel SpakowiczGeorge WeinerHoward ColmanIgor PuzanovIslam Eljilany
Institutions(10)
Indiana University Me…University of Colorad…University of KentuckyUniversity of VirginiaHuntsman Cancer Insti…Uniformed Services Un…The Ohio State Univer…University Of Iowa He…Roswell Park Cancer I…H. Lee Moffitt Cancer…

Papers

Differential Infiltration of Key Immune T-Cell Populations Across Malignancies Varying by Immunogenic Potential and the Likelihood of Response to Immunotherapy

Background: Solid tumors vary by the immunogenic potential of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and the likelihood of response to immunotherapy. The emerging literature has identified key immune cell populations that significantly impact immune activation or suppression within the TME. This study investigated candidate T-cell populations and their differential infiltration within different tumor types as estimated from mRNA co-expression levels of the corresponding cellular markers. Methods: We analyzed the mRNA co-expression levels of cellular biomarkers that define stem-like tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), tissue-resident memory T-cells (TRM), early dysfunctional T-cells, late dysfunctional T-cells, activated-potentially anti-tumor (APA) T-cells and Butyrophilin 3A (BTN3A) isoforms, utilizing clinical and transcriptomic data from 1892 patients diagnosed with melanoma, bladder, ovarian, or pancreatic carcinomas. Real-world data were collected under the Total Cancer Care Protocol and the Avatar® project (NCT03977402) across 18 cancer centers. Furthermore, we compared the survival outcomes following immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) based on immune cell gene expression. Results: In melanoma and bladder cancer, the estimated infiltration of APA T-cells differed significantly (p = 4.67 × 10−12 and p = 5.80 × 10−12, respectively) compared to ovarian and pancreatic cancers. Ovarian cancer had lower TRM T-cell infiltration than melanoma, bladder, and pancreatic (p = 2.23 × 10−8, 3.86 × 10−28, and 7.85 × 10−9, respectively). Similar trends were noted with stem-like, early, and late dysfunctional T-cells. Melanoma and ovarian expressed BTN3A isoforms more than other malignancies. Higher densities of stem-like TILs; TRM, early and late dysfunctional T-cells; APA T-cells; and BTN3A isoforms were associated with increased survival in melanoma (p = 0.0075, 0.00059, 0.013, 0.005, 0.0016, and 0.041, respectively). The TRM gene signature was a moderate predictor of survival in the melanoma cohort (AUROC = 0.65), with similar findings in testing independent public datasets of ICI-treated patients with melanoma (AUROC 0.61–0.64). Conclusions: Key cellular elements related to immune activation are more heavily infiltrated within ICI-responsive versus non-responsive malignancies, supporting a central role in anti-tumor immunity. In melanoma patients treated with ICIs, higher densities of stem-like TILs, TRM T-cells, early dysfunctional T-cells, late dysfunctional T-cells, APA T-cells, and BTN3A isoforms were associated with improved survival.

24Works
1Papers
11Collaborators
Lymphocytes, Tumor-InfiltratingNeoplasmsTumor MicroenvironmentCancer SurvivorsLeukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-CellNeoplasms, Second Primary

Positions

Thoracic Oncologist

Indiana University · Medical Oncology

Education

2022

Fellow

Moffitt Cancer Center · Hematology/Oncology

2019

Resident

Mayo Clinic · Internal Medicin

2014

MD

Universidad CES Facultad de Medicina

Country

US