| Literature DB >> 30228945 |
Florian Bochen1, Benedikt Balensiefer1, Sandrina Körner1, Jörg Thomas Bittenbring2, Frank Neumann2, Armand Koch3, Klaus Bumm4, Anke Marx1, Silke Wemmert1, Georgios Papaspyrou1, David Zuschlag1, Jan Philipp Kühn1, Basel Al Kadah1, Bernhard Schick1, Maximilian Linxweiler1.
Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency is frequently observed in human cancer patients and a prognostic relevance could be shown for some entities. Additionally, it is known that vitamin D can stimulate the patients' antitumor immunity. However, valid epidemiological data for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients are sparse and functional studies on a possible connection between vitamin D and the patients' immune system are missing. 25-OH vitamin D serum levels were analyzed in 231 HNSCC patients and 232 healthy controls and correlated with clinical data and patient survival. Intra- and peritumoral infiltration with T-cell, NK-cell and macrophage populations was analyzed in 102 HNSCC patients by immunohistochemistry. In 11 HNSCC patients, NK-cells were isolated before and after vitamin D substitution and analyzed for their cytotoxic activity directed against a HNSCC cell line. Vitamin D serum levels were significantly lower in HNSCC patients compared with healthy controls. Low vitamin D levels were associated with lymphatic metastasis and a negative HPV status and were a significant predictor of poor overall survival. HNSCC patients with severe vitamin D deficiency showed significantly altered intra- and peritumoral immune cell infiltrate levels. After vitamin D substitution, the patients' NK cells showed a significant rise in cytotoxic activity. Taken together, we could show that Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in HNSCC patients and is a predictor of poor survival. Vitamin D substitution used as an adjuvant in immune therapies such as cetuximab and nivolumab treatment could support antitumorigenic immune responses, thus contributing to the improvement of the patients' prognosis in the context of a multimodal therapy.Entities:
Keywords: T cells; head and neck cancer; immunooncology; natural killer cells; vitamin D
Year: 2018 PMID: 30228945 PMCID: PMC6140588 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2018.1476817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110