Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION Dendritic cells (DCs) are potent antigen presenting cells that can be exploited to initiate an adaptive anti-tumoral immune response. DC vaccine clinical trials for primary glioblastoma (GBM) have reported prolonged progression-free survival without any impact on overall survival (OS). We report a radiomics approach that identifies a subpopulation of patients with prolonged OS in clinical trial MC1272. METHODS Twenty adults with primary GBM undergoing standard-of-care therapy were enrolled in MC1272. Autologous DCs were pulsed with allogenic GBM cell lines to generate vaccines that were administered for up to twelve cycles. Standard brain imaging was obtained at the initiation of treatment and two months afterwards. An independent cohort of image-localized biopsies underwent RNA sequencing followed by cellular deconvolution to estimate T cell abundance. A machine learning model was trained to predict intratumoral T cell abundance from imaging features, and the model was applied to MC1272 patient imaging. RESULTS Voxelwise predictions of T cell abundance were generated for each patient’s pre- and post-treatment images. The difference in total intratumoral T cell abundance between imaging timepoints classified patients into increasing or decreasing T cell groups. Patients whose T cells increased had longer OS (median, 21 months) than those whose T cells decreased (median, 10 months; p=0.0035). The significance remained in a Cox proportional hazards analysis that adjusted for patient age and sex (p=0.011). CONCLUSIONS A spatially-resolved radiomics model detected that an intratumoral T cell influx after DC vaccine therapy was associated with prolonged OS. The “post-treatment” imaging in this study was obtained a mere two months after DC vaccine initiation, suggesting that our radiomics model can provide an early indication of treatment responsiveness and prognosis in these patients.

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