Autoimmunity Against Surfactant Protein B Is Associated with Pneumonitis During Checkpoint Blockade

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2024 Apr 16. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202311-2136OC. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Rationale: Immune checkpoint inhibitor-related pneumonitis is a serious autoimmune event affecting up to 20% of patients with non-small cell lung cancer, yet the factors underpinning its development in some patients and not others are poorly understood.

Objectives: To investigate the role of autoantibodies and autoreactive T cells against surfactant-related proteins in the development of pneumonitis.

Methods: The study cohort consisted of non-small cell lung cancer patients who gave blood samples before and during immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment. Serum was used for proteomics analyses and to detect autoantibodies present during pneumonitis. T cell stimulation assays and single-cell RNA sequencing were performed to investigate the specificity and functionality of peripheral autoreactive T cells. The findings were confirmed in a validation cohort comprising patients with non-small cell lung cancer and patients with melanoma.

Measurements and main results: Across both cohorts, patients who developed pneumonitis had higher pre-treatment levels of immunoglobulin G autoantibodies targeting surfactant protein-B. At the onset of pneumonitis, these patients also exhibited higher frequencies of CD4+ interferon-gamma-positive surfactant protein B-specific T cells, and expanding T cell clonotypes recognizing this protein, accompanied by a pro-inflammatory serum proteomic profile.

Conclusions: Our data suggest that the co-occurrence of surfactant protein-B-specific immunoglobulin G autoantibodies and CD4+ T cells is associated with the development of pneumonitis during ICI therapy. Pre-treatment levels of these antibodies may represent a potential biomarker for elevated risk of developing pneumonitis and on-treatment levels may provide a diagnostic aid.

Keywords: NSCLC; autoimmunity; immune checkpoint inhibitor; pneumonitis; surfactant protein B.