作者
Christina Guo,Adam Sharp,Bora Gürel,Mateus Crespo,Ines Figueiredo,Sanjay Jain,Ursula Vogl,Jan Rekowski,Mahtab Rouhifard,Lewis Gallagher,Wei Yuan,Suzanne Carreira,Khobe Chandran,Alec Paschalis,Ilaria Colombo,Anastasios Stathis,Claudia Bertan,George Seed,Jane Goodall,Florence I. Raynaud,Ruth Ruddle,Karen E. Swales,Jason Malia,Denisa Bogdan,Crescens Tiu,Reece Caldwell,Caterina Aversa,Ana Ferreira,Antje Neeb,Nina Tunariu,Daniel Westaby,Juliet Carmichael,Guillermo de Velasco,Christina Yap,Ruth Matthews,Hannah Badham,Toby Prout,Alison Turner,Mona Parmar,Holly Tovey,Ruth Riisnaes,Penny Flohr,Jesús Gil,David Waugh,Shaun Decordova,Ariel N. Schlag,Bianca Calì,Andrea Alimonti,Johann S. de Bono
摘要
Abstract Inflammation is a hallmark of cancer 1 . In patients with cancer, peripheral blood myeloid expansion, indicated by a high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, associates with shorter survival and treatment resistance across malignancies and therapeutic modalities 2–5 . Whether myeloid inflammation drives progression of prostate cancer in humans remain unclear. Here we show that inhibition of myeloid chemotaxis can reduce tumour-elicited myeloid inflammation and reverse therapy resistance in a subset of patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). We show that a higher blood neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio reflects tumour myeloid infiltration and tumour expression of senescence-associated mRNA species, including those that encode myeloid-chemoattracting CXCR2 ligands. To determine whether myeloid cells fuel resistance to androgen receptor signalling inhibitors, and whether inhibiting CXCR2 to block myeloid chemotaxis reverses this, we conducted an investigator-initiated, proof-of-concept clinical trial of a CXCR2 inhibitor (AZD5069) plus enzalutamide in patients with metastatic CRPC that is resistant to androgen receptor signalling inhibitors. This combination was well tolerated without dose-limiting toxicity and it decreased circulating neutrophil levels, reduced intratumour CD11b + HLA-DR lo CD15 + CD14 − myeloid cell infiltration and imparted durable clinical benefit with biochemical and radiological responses in a subset of patients with metastatic CRPC. This study provides clinical evidence that senescence-associated myeloid inflammation can fuel metastatic CRPC progression and resistance to androgen receptor blockade. Targeting myeloid chemotaxis merits broader evaluation in other cancers.