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Endocrine Abstracts (2025) 116 B7 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.116.B7

NANETS2025 18th Annual Multidisciplinary NET Medical Symposium NANETS 2025 Basic Science (10 abstracts)

Changes in the Tumor Microenvironment of Well-Differentiated Metastatic Neuroendocrine Tumors might mediate resistance in patients treated with 177Lu-DOTATATE

Rahil Ummar Faruk Abbu1, Kevin S. Tanager, MD2, Campbell Herring1, Olga Lakiza1, Namrata Setia, MD2, Andy Liao, MD3, Ralph Weichselbaum, MD4 & Xavier M. Keutgen, MD1


1Division of General Surgery and Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA; 2Department of Pathology, University of Chicago, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA; 3Department of Hematology and Oncology, University of Chicago, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA; 4Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Chicago, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA


Background: Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy with 177Lu-DOTATATE (PRRT) improves outcomes in well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor (NETs). However, heterogeneous responses and relapse suggest that features within the tumor microenvironment (TME) might mediate treatment resistance. We investigated immune- and stromal remodeling pre- and post PRRT across metastatic NET lesions, correlating findings with clinical response and genomic features to identify determinants of PRRT efficacy.

Methods: We analyzed 34 tumor samples from 12 patients with pancreatic (PNET, n=5) and small bowel NETs (SBNETs, n=7) treated with PRRT that underwent subsequent surgical debulking. Tumor samples included matched pre/post-PRRT tissues from liver metastases categorized as responding, stable, or progressing. Multiplex immunofluorescence profiling enabled TME phenotyping, spatial analysis, and quantification of immune-stromal interactions. Ki-67 proliferation indices and OncoPlus next-generation sequencing were also performed to evaluate somatic mutations and tumor mutational burden (TMB).

Results: Median time between PRRT and surgical debulking was 10.5 months. Four patients had progression in some, 5 patients in all and 3 patients in none of the liver tumors after PRRT and prior to debulking. Across all samples, PRRT increased CD8+ T cell infiltration (20%, P = 3.9×10³¹), CD31+ vascular remodeling (18%, P < 1×10¹0), and PD-L1 upregulation (5%, P = 1.3×104). Spatial analysis confirmed post-PRRT CD8+ proximity to PD-L1+, FoxP3+, and CD31+ cells, indicating immune exclusion.Progressing PNET liver metastases showed an immune-silent baseline with CD4+ dominance (90%, P < 1×10¹0) and minimal CD8+ (5%), CD31+ (2%), and FoxP3+ (0%) cells. In contrast, responding PNET liver metastases exhibited elevated CD8+ (20%), CD31+ (18%), and PD-L1+ (5%) infiltration, while exhausted CD8+PD-L1+ subsets remained unchanged (3%, P = 0.50). Stable SBNET liver metastases had elevated FoxP3+ (16%) and CD68+PD-L1+ (1%) macrophages while progressing SBNETs showed higher CD8+ (56%), PD-L1+ (9%), and CD8+PD-L1+ (2.2%) infiltration. Genomically, PNETs harbored higher Ki-67 indices (~11.33% vs. ~8.9%), a greater number of somatic mutations (average 2.8 vs. 1.5 mutations), and higher TMB (4.54 vs. 3.44 mutations/Mb).

Conclusions: PRRT induces CD8+ infiltration and angiogenic remodeling but is limited by immunosuppressive features. SBNETs exhibiting cytotoxic infiltration and PD-L1 expression after PRRT may benefit from immune checkpoint blockade. In contrast, PNETs characterized by CD4+ and CD68+ dominance with minimal checkpoint expression may require priming with multikinase inhibitors to remodel the TME prior to checkpoint inhibition to enhance PRRT efficacy.

Abstract ID #33448

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