作者
Diwakar Davar,Amiran Dzutsev,John A. McCulloch,Richard R. Rodrigues,Joë-Marc Chauvin,Robert M. Morrison,Richelle DeBlasio,Carmine Menna,Quanquan Ding,Ornella Pagliano,Bochra Zidi,Shuowen Zhang,Jonathan H. Badger,Marie Vétizou,Alicia M. Cole,Miriam R. Fernandes,Stephanie Prescott,Raquel Costa,Ascharya K. Balaji,Andrey Morgun,Ivan Vujkovic-Cvijin,Hong Wang,Amir A. Borhani,Marc Schwartz,Howard M. Dubner,S. Ernst,Amy Rose,Yana G. Najjar,Yasmine Belkaid,John M. Kirkwood,Giorgio Trinchieri,Hassane M. Zarour
摘要
Anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) therapy provides long-term clinical benefits to patients with advanced melanoma. The composition of the gut microbiota correlates with anti-PD-1 efficacy in preclinical models and cancer patients. To investigate whether resistance to anti-PD-1 can be overcome by changing the gut microbiota, this clinical trial evaluated the safety and efficacy of responder-derived fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) together with anti-PD-1 in patients with PD-1-refractory melanoma. This combination was well tolerated, provided clinical benefit in 6 of 15 patients, and induced rapid and durable microbiota perturbation. Responders exhibited increased abundance of taxa that were previously shown to be associated with response to anti-PD-1, increased CD8+ T cell activation, and decreased frequency of interleukin-8-expressing myeloid cells. Responders had distinct proteomic and metabolomic signatures, and transkingdom network analyses confirmed that the gut microbiome regulated these changes. Collectively, our findings show that FMT and anti-PD-1 changed the gut microbiome and reprogrammed the tumor microenvironment to overcome resistance to anti-PD-1 in a subset of PD-1 advanced melanoma.