- Pai, Chien-Chun Steven;
- Huang, John T;
- Lu, Xiaoqing;
- Simons, Donald M;
- Park, Chanhyuk;
- Chang, Anthony;
- Tamaki, Whitney;
- Liu, Eric;
- Roybal, Kole T;
- Seagal, Jane;
- Chen, Mingyi;
- Hagihara, Katsunobu;
- Wei, Xiao X;
- DuPage, Michel;
- Kwek, Serena S;
- Oh, David Y;
- Daud, Adil;
- Tsai, Katy K;
- Wu, Clint;
- Zhang, Li;
- Fasso, Marcella;
- Sachidanandam, Ravi;
- Jayaprakash, Anitha;
- Lin, Ingrid;
- Casbon, Amy-Jo;
- Kinsbury, Gillian A;
- Fong, Lawrence
Resistance to checkpoint-blockade treatments is a challenge in the clinic. We found that although treatment with combined anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 improved control of established tumors, this combination compromised anti-tumor immunity in the low tumor burden (LTB) state in pre-clinical models as well as in melanoma patients. Activated tumor-specific T cells expressed higher amounts of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) receptor and were more susceptible to apoptosis than naive T cells. Combination treatment induced deletion of tumor-specific T cells and altered the T cell repertoire landscape, skewing the distribution of T cells toward lower-frequency clonotypes. Additionally, combination therapy induced higher IFN-γ production in the LTB state than in the high tumor burden (HTB) state on a per-cell basis, reflecting a less exhausted immune status in the LTB state. Thus, elevated IFN-γ secretion in the LTB state contributes to the development of an immune-intrinsic mechanism of resistance to combination checkpoint blockade, highlighting the importance of achieving the optimal magnitude of immune stimulation for successful combination immunotherapy strategies.