Decoding Immunotherapy Response in Colorectal Cancer: Translational Insights Beyond MSI.
: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are among the transformative and manageable systemic therapies for several cancer types, including colorectal cancer (CRC).
APA
Cataldi C, Karaoğlan BB, et al. (2026). Decoding Immunotherapy Response in Colorectal Cancer: Translational Insights Beyond MSI.. Cancers, 18(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18050852
MLA
Cataldi C, et al.. "Decoding Immunotherapy Response in Colorectal Cancer: Translational Insights Beyond MSI.." Cancers, vol. 18, no. 5, 2026.
PMID
41827785
Abstract
: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are among the transformative and manageable systemic therapies for several cancer types, including colorectal cancer (CRC). Nevertheless, their clinical benefit is limited to mismatch-deficient or microsatellite instability-high diseases, which represent only a small percentage of cases. Despite this initial major and stringent selection, primary and acquired resistance remain clinically relevant. Therefore, the identification of additional biomarkers is essential to refine patient selection and guide rational combinational strategies. This review aims to summarize the current evidence regarding established and emerging biomarkers of response and resistance to ICIs in CRC. : This narrative review identified and synthesized relevant clinical trials, translational studies, and reviews through a literature search of emerging biomarkers of immunotherapy response in colorectal cancer. : Deficient mismatch repair/high microsatellite instability remains the most reliable predictive biomarker of ICI response, emphasized by high tumor mutational burden, / mutations, and specific tumor microenvironment features. Emerging indicators, including molecular alterations, antigen presentation machinery integrity, PD-L1-mediated signaling, microbiome connections, and circulating tumor DNA kinetics, have demonstrated significant potential as sources for therapeutic response prediction and have informed the development of innovative combination strategies in both MSI-H and MSS CRCs. : Immunotherapy response in CRC is determined by a complex interplay between tumor-intrinsic, immune, microenvironmental, and systemic factors. Integrating multiple biomarkers may provide superior stratification and guide therapeutic strategies. Prospective validation and standardized biomarker assessment will be imperative to translate these insights into clinical practice.