Immunological biomarkers of response and resistance to treatment with cabozantinib and nivolumab in recurrent endometrial cancer

Diane Marie Del Valle & Jianjun Zhang et al. · 2025-02-25

Background

Antiangiogenics combined with immune checkpoint blockade have become standard of care for recurrent endometrial cancer after standard platinum-based chemotherapy. To dissect mechanisms and define biomarkers associated with clinical outcomes to these combinations, we applied multidimensional immune monitoring to peripheral blood specimens collected from a randomized phase 2 trial of nivolumab with or without cabozantinib in 75 evaluable patients with recurrent endometrial cancer (NCI ETCTN 10104, NCT03367741). This trial demonstrated superiority of the combination to nivolumab alone.

Methods and results

Using Olink proteomics, mass cytometry, tumor antigen-specific ELISA, and whole exome tumor sequencing, we identified longitudinal immune signatures specific to cabozantinib use, including an increase in plasma HO-1 and reduction in plasma vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2, interleukin-12, and circulating plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Prior exposure to immunotherapy and carcinosarcoma histology had no adverse impact on clinical benefit or biomarkers, and copy-number high tumors were associated with increased plasma granzymes on combination treatment. Higher baseline plasma levels of myeloid-related markers (chemokine ligand 23/CCL23, colony-stimulating factor-1/macrophage colony-stimulating factor/CSF1) were associated with poor overall and progression-free survival, and lack of clinical benefit (defined as progressive or stable disease <6 months) following combination treatment (Kaplan-Meier, multivariate Cox, false discover rate <0.05). Patients with favorable outcomes had higher levels of activated T-cell markers (plasma ICOS-L, CD28) and exhibited spontaneous autoantibody titers to tumor antigen NY-ESO-1. Patients experiencing severe adverse events from the combination therapy had higher baseline levels of neutrophil-derived markers (CXCL1).

Conclusions

Overall, this study highlights potential resistance and response mechanisms to nivolumab+cabozantinib and suggests prioritizing combination treatment in patients with activated T-cell immunogenicity profiles while exploring future combinatorial therapies targeting myeloid populations to overcome resistance.

Funding
High-Dimensional Immune Monitoring of NCI-Supported Immunotherapy TrialsPRIMAVO: Interactive exploration of cancer patient precision immune monitoring data in clinical trialsCharacterizing and predicting colitis in immune checkpoint blockade-treated cancer patientsCancer Immunologic Data Commons (CIDC) Supplement RequestCancer Immune Monitoring and Analysis CenterMD Anderson Cancer Immune Monitoring and Analysis Center MDA-CIMACConduits: Mount Sinai Health System Translational Science HubAdmin CoreNational Cancer Institute Grant 140D0421D0007Admin CorePRIMAVO: Interactive exploration of cancer patient precision immune monitoring data in clinical trialsCharacterizing and predicting colitis in immune checkpoint blockade-treated cancer patientsMD Anderson Cancer Immune Monitoring and Analysis Center MDA-CIMACCancer Immunologic Data Commons (CIDC) Supplement RequestHigh-Dimensional Immune Monitoring of NCI-Supported Immunotherapy TrialsCancer Immune Monitoring and Analysis CenterNational Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Grant UL1TR004419Conquer Cancer Foundation Grant 2019 Career Development Award

NCI NIH HHS

U24 CA224319

NCI NIH HHS

R33 CA263705

NIDDK NIH HHS

U01 DK124165

NCI NIH HHS

U24 CA224316

NCI NIH HHS

U24 CA224331

NCI NIH HHS

U24 CA224285

NCATS NIH HHS

UL1 TR004419

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA196521

National Cancer Institute

P30CA196521

National Cancer Institute

R33CA263705

National Cancer Institute

U01DK124165

National Cancer Institute

U24CA224285

National Cancer Institute

U24CA224316

National Cancer Institute

U24CA224319

National Cancer Institute

U24CA224331