Down-regulated HHLA2 enhances neoadjuvant immunotherapy efficacy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Ao Zeng, Yanze Yin, Zhilong Xu, Abudumijiti Abuduwayiti, Fujun Yang, Mohammed Saud Shaik, Chao Wang, Keyi Chen, Chao Wang, Xinyun Fang, Jie Dai

TL;DR
Patients with lung cancer and COPD respond better to immunotherapy due to lower HHLA2 levels, which boost a specific type of immune cells.
Contribution
Identifies HHLA2 down-regulation in NSCLC with COPD as a novel biomarker linked to improved immunotherapy response.
Findings
NSCLC patients with COPD had higher major pathologic response rates after neoadjuvant immunotherapy.
Lower HHLA2 levels correlated with increased CD8+CD103+ tissue-resident memory T cells in COPD-associated NSCLC.
Single-cell analysis confirmed TRM enrichment in patients achieving major pathologic response.
Abstract
Emerging data suggested a favorable outcome in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients treated by immunotherapy. The objective of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of neoadjuvant immunotherapy among NSCLC with COPD versus NSCLC without COPD and explore the potential mechanistic links. Patients with NSCLC receiving neoadjuvant immunotherapy and surgery at Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital between November 2020 and January 2023 were reviewed. The assessment of neoadjuvant immunotherapy’s effectiveness was conducted based on the major pathologic response (MPR). The gene expression profile was investigated by RNA sequencing data. Immune cell proportions were examined using flow cytometry. The association between gene expression, immune cells, and pathologic response was validated by immunohistochemistry and single-cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMiddle East and Rwanda Conflicts
