- Eroglu, Zeynep;
- Zaretsky, Jesse M;
- Hu-Lieskovan, Siwen;
- Kim, Dae Won;
- Algazi, Alain;
- Johnson, Douglas B;
- Liniker, Elizabeth;
- Ben Kong;
- Munhoz, Rodrigo;
- Rapisuwon, Suthee;
- Gherardini, Pier Federico;
- Chmielowski, Bartosz;
- Wang, Xiaoyan;
- Shintaku, I Peter;
- Wei, Cody;
- Sosman, Jeffrey A;
- Joseph, Richard W;
- Postow, Michael A;
- Carlino, Matteo S;
- Hwu, Wen-Jen;
- Scolyer, Richard A;
- Messina, Jane;
- Cochran, Alistair J;
- Long, Georgina V;
- Ribas, Antoni
Desmoplastic melanoma is a rare subtype of melanoma characterized by dense fibrous stroma, resistance to chemotherapy and a lack of actionable driver mutations, and is highly associated with ultraviolet light-induced DNA damage. We analysed sixty patients with advanced desmoplastic melanoma who had been treated with antibodies to block programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) or PD-1 ligand (PD-L1). Objective tumour responses were observed in forty-two of the sixty patients (70%; 95% confidence interval 57-81%), including nineteen patients (32%) with a complete response. Whole-exome sequencing revealed a high mutational load and frequent NF1 mutations (fourteen out of seventeen cases) in these tumours. Immunohistochemistry analysis from nineteen desmoplastic melanomas and thirteen non-desmoplastic melanomas revealed a higher percentage of PD-L1-positive cells in the tumour parenchyma in desmoplastic melanomas (P = 0.04); these cells were highly associated with increased CD8 density and PD-L1 expression in the tumour invasive margin. Therefore, patients with advanced desmoplastic melanoma derive substantial clinical benefit from PD-1 or PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade therapy, even though desmoplastic melanoma is defined by its dense desmoplastic fibrous stroma. The benefit is likely to result from the high mutational burden and a frequent pre-existing adaptive immune response limited by PD-L1 expression.