Literature DB >> 22425909

Immune response in melanoma: an in-depth analysis of the primary tumor and corresponding sentinel lymph node.

Michelle W Ma1, Ratna C Medicherla, Meng Qian, Eleazar Vega-Saenz de Miera, Erica B Friedman, Russell S Berman, Richard L Shapiro, Anna C Pavlick, Patrick A Ott, Nina Bhardwaj, Yongzhao Shao, Iman Osman, Farbod Darvishian.   

Abstract

The sentinel lymph node is the initial site of metastasis. Downregulation of antitumor immunity has a role in nodal progression. Our objective was to investigate the relationship between immune modulation and sentinel lymph node positivity, correlating it with outcome in melanoma patients. Lymph node/primary tissues from melanoma patients prospectively accrued and followed at New York University Medical Center were evaluated for the presence of regulatory T cells (Foxp3(+)) and dendritic cells (conventional: CD11c(+), mature: CD86(+)) using immunohistochemistry. Primary melanoma immune cell profiles from sentinel lymph node-positive/-negative patients were compared. Logistic regression models inclusive of standard-of-care/immunological primary tumor characteristics were constructed to predict the risk of sentinel lymph node positivity. Immunological responses in the positive sentinel lymph node were also compared with those in the negative non-sentinel node from the same nodal basin and matched negative sentinel lymph node. Decreased immune response was defined as increased regulatory T cells or decreased dendritic cells. Associations between the expression of these immune modulators, clinicopathological variables, and clinical outcome were evaluated using univariate/multivariate analyses. Primary tumor conventional dendritic cells and regression were protective against sentinel lymph node metastasis (odds ratio=0.714, 0.067; P=0.0099, 0.0816, respectively). Antitumor immunity was downregulated in the positive sentinel lymph node with an increase in regulatory T cells compared with the negative non-sentinel node from the same nodal basin (P=0.0005) and matched negative sentinel lymph node (P=0.0002). The positive sentinel lymph node also had decreased numbers of conventional dendritic cells compared with the negative sentinel lymph node (P<0.0001). Adding sentinel lymph node regulatory T cell expression improved the discriminative power of a recurrence risk assessment model using clinical stage. Primary tumor regression was associated with prolonged disease-free (P=0.025) and melanoma-specific (P=0.014) survival. Our results support an assessment of local immune profiles in both the primary tumor and sentinel lymph node to help guide therapeutic decisions.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22425909      PMCID: PMC3882943          DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.2012.43

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mod Pathol        ISSN: 0893-3952            Impact factor:   7.842


  34 in total

1.  Intratumoral neutrophils and plasmacytoid dendritic cells indicate poor prognosis and are associated with pSTAT3 expression in AJCC stage I/II melanoma.

Authors:  Trine O Jensen; Henrik Schmidt; Holger J Møller; Frede Donskov; Morten Høyer; Pia Sjoegren; Ib J Christensen; Torben Steiniche
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2011-09-22       Impact factor: 6.860

2.  Predicting sentinel node status in AJCC stage I/II primary cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Laura L Kruper; Francis R Spitz; Brian J Czerniecki; Douglas L Fraker; Anne Blackwood-Chirchir; Michael E Ming; David E Elder; Rosalie Elenitsas; Dupont Guerry; Phyllis A Gimotty
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2006-11-15       Impact factor: 6.860

3.  Factors predictive of the status of sentinel lymph nodes in melanoma patients from a large multicenter database.

Authors:  Richard L White; Gregory D Ayers; Virginia H Stell; Shouluan Ding; Jeffrey E Gershenwald; Jonathan C Salo; Barbara A Pockaj; Richard Essner; Mark Faries; Kim James Charney; Eli Avisar; Axel Hauschild; Friederike Egberts; Bruce J Averbook; Carlos A Garberoglio; John T Vetto; Merrick I Ross; David Chu; Vijay Trisal; Harald Hoekstra; Eric Whitman; Harold J Wanebo; Daniel Debonis; Michael Vezeridis; Aaron Chevinsky; Mohammed Kashani-Sabet; Yu Shyr; Lynne Berry; Zhiguo Zhao; Seng-Jaw Soong; Stanley P L Leong
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2011-06-07       Impact factor: 5.344

4.  miR-30b/30d regulation of GalNAc transferases enhances invasion and immunosuppression during metastasis.

Authors:  Avital Gaziel-Sovran; Miguel F Segura; Raffaella Di Micco; Mary K Collins; Douglas Hanniford; Eleazar Vega-Saenz de Miera; John F Rakus; John F Dankert; Shulian Shang; Robert S Kerbel; Nina Bhardwaj; Yongzhao Shao; Farbod Darvishian; Jiri Zavadil; Adrian Erlebacher; Lara K Mahal; Iman Osman; Eva Hernando
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2011-07-12       Impact factor: 31.743

5.  Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes predict sentinel lymph node positivity in patients with cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Rebecca C Taylor; Ami Patel; Katherine S Panageas; Klaus J Busam; Mary S Brady
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2007-03-01       Impact factor: 44.544

6.  Clinical considerations on sentinel node biopsy in melanoma from an Italian multicentric study on 1,313 patients (SOLISM-IMI).

Authors:  Alessandro Testori; Gian Luca De Salvo; Maria Cristina Montesco; Giuseppe Trifirò; Simone Mocellin; Giorgio Landi; Giuseppe Macripò; Paolo Carcoforo; Giuseppe Ricotti; Giuseppe Giudice; Franco Picciotto; Davide Donner; Franco Di Filippo; Javier Soteldo; Dario Casara; Mauro Schiavon; Antonella Vecchiato; Sandro Pasquali; Federica Baldini; Giovanni Mazzarol; Carlo Riccardo Rossi
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2009-01-09       Impact factor: 5.344

7.  The regressing thin malignant melanoma: a distinctive lesion with metastatic potential.

Authors:  M A Gromet; W L Epstein; M S Blois
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  1978-11       Impact factor: 6.860

8.  Clinical and histopathological risk factors to predict sentinel lymph node positivity, disease-free and overall survival in clinical stages I-II AJCC skin melanoma: outcome analysis from a single-institution prospectively collected database.

Authors:  M Mandalà; G L Imberti; D Piazzalunga; M Belfiglio; R Labianca; M Barberis; L Marchesi; P Poletti; L Bonomi; L Novellino; K Di Biagio; A Milesi; U Guerra; C Tondini
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2009-06-22       Impact factor: 9.162

9.  Simultaneous Foxp3 and IDO expression is associated with sentinel lymph node metastases in breast cancer.

Authors:  Aaron S Mansfield; Paivi S Heikkila; Ari T Vaara; Karl A J von Smitten; Jukka M Vakkila; Marjut H K Leidenius
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2009-07-15       Impact factor: 4.430

10.  Prognostic implications of type and density of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes in gastric cancer.

Authors:  H E Lee; S W Chae; Y J Lee; M A Kim; H S Lee; B L Lee; W H Kim
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2008-10-21       Impact factor: 7.640

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  18 in total

1.  Reply: The significance of regression in thin melanoma of the skin.

Authors:  K M Joyce; P J Regan
Journal:  Ir J Med Sci       Date:  2017-05-06       Impact factor: 1.568

Review 2.  The lymph node pre-metastatic niche.

Authors:  Jonathan P Sleeman
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2015-11       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Risk Factors for Lymphatic and Hematogenous Dissemination in Patients With Stages I to II Cutaneous Melanoma.

Authors:  Laura Calomarde-Rees; Rosario García-Calatayud; Celia Requena Caballero; Esperanza Manrique-Silva; Víctor Traves; Zaida García-Casado; Virtudes Soriano; Rajiv Kumar; Eduardo Nagore
Journal:  JAMA Dermatol       Date:  2019-06-01       Impact factor: 10.282

4.  Genetic associations of the interleukin locus at 1q32.1 with clinical outcomes of cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Justin Rendleman; Matjaz Vogelsang; Anuj Bapodra; Christina Adaniel; Ines Silva; Duane Moogk; Carlos N Martinez; Nathaniel Fleming; Jerry Shields; Richard Shapiro; Russell Berman; Anna Pavlick; David Polsky; Yongzhao Shao; Iman Osman; Michelle Krogsgaard; Tomas Kirchhoff
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2015-01-20       Impact factor: 6.318

5.  Is There a Relationship Between TILs and Regression in Melanoma?

Authors:  Steven Morrison; Gang Han; Faith Elenwa; John T Vetto; Graham Fowler; Stanley P Leong; Mohammed Kashani-Sabet; Barbara Pockaj; Heidi E Kosiorek; Jonathan S Zager; Jane L Messina; Nicola Mozzillo; Schlomo Schneebaum; Dale Han
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 5.344

6.  Immune cell profile of sentinel lymph nodes in patients with malignant melanoma - FOXP3+ cell density in cases with positive sentinel node status is associated with unfavorable clinical outcome.

Authors:  Anita Mohos; Tímea Sebestyén; Gabriella Liszkay; Vanda Plótár; Szabolcs Horváth; István Gaudi; Andrea Ladányi
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2013-02-18       Impact factor: 5.531

7.  Nodal metastasis in cervical cancer occurs in clearly delineated fields of immune suppression in the pelvic lymph catchment area.

Authors:  A Marijne Heeren; Eline de Boer; Maaike C G Bleeker; René J P Musters; Marrije R Buist; Gemma G Kenter; Tanja D de Gruijl; Ekaterina S Jordanova
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2015-10-20

8.  Regression and Sentinel Lymph Node Status in Melanoma Progression.

Authors:  Alina Florentina Letca; Loredana Ungureanu; Simona Corina Şenilă; Lavinia Elena Grigore; Ştefan Pop; Oana Fechete; Ştefan Cristian Vesa; Rodica Cosgarea
Journal:  Med Sci Monit       Date:  2018-03-06

9.  Dissecting the immune landscape of tumor draining lymph nodes in melanoma with high-plex spatially resolved protein detection.

Authors:  Georgia M Beasley; Aaron D Therien; Eda K Holl; Rami Al-Rohil; Maria Angelica Selim; Nellie E Farrow; Liuliu Pan; Premi Haynes; Yan Liang; Douglas S Tyler; Brent A Hanks; Smita K Nair
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2020-08-19       Impact factor: 6.968

10.  The changes of angiogenesis and immune cell infiltration in the intra- and peri-tumoral melanoma microenvironment.

Authors:  Vladimir Zidlik; Svetlana Brychtova; Magdalena Uvirova; Dusan Ziak; Jana Dvorackova
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2015-04-09       Impact factor: 5.923

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