Purpose
Uveal melanoma (UM) is a rare melanoma variant with no effective therapies once metastases develop. Although durable cancer regression can be achieved in metastatic cutaneous melanoma (CM) with immunotherapies that augment naturally existing anti-tumor T cell responses, the role of these treatments for metastatic UM remains unclear. We sought to define the relative immunogenicity of these two melanoma variants and determine whether endogenous anti-tumor immune responses exist against UM.
Experimental Design
We surgically procured liver metastases from UM (n=16) and CM (n=35) patients and compared the attributes of their respective tumor cell populations and their infiltrating T cells (TIL) using clinical radiology, histopathology, immune assays and whole exomic sequencing.
Results
Despite having common melanocytic lineage, UM and CM metastases differed in their melanin content, tumor differentiation antigen expression, and somatic mutational profile. Immunologic analysis of TIL cultures expanded from these divergent forms of melanoma revealed CM TIL were predominantly composed of CD8+ T cells, while UM TIL were CD4+ dominant. Reactivity against autologous tumor was significantly greater in CM TIL compared to UM TIL. However, we identified TIL from a subset of UM patients which had robust anti-tumor reactivity comparable in magnitude to CM TIL. Interestingly, the absence of melanin pigmentation in the parental tumor strongly correlated with the generation of highly reactive UM TIL.
Conclusions
The discovery of this immunogenic group of UM metastases should prompt clinical efforts to determine whether patients who harbor these unique tumors can benefit from immunotherapies that exploit endogenous anti-tumor T cell populations.
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