| Literature DB >> 33262828 |
Mayuko Nagano1, Kanako Saito2, Yuji Kozuka3, Masako Ichishi3, Hiroto Yuasa3, Aya Noro1, Nao Imai1, Mai Shibusawa1, Mao Kimoto1, Makoto Ishitobi1, Yasutaka Tono2, Hiroyasu Oda2, Mikiya Ishihara2, Toshiro Mizuno2, Tomoko Ogawa1, Naoyuki Katayama2.
Abstract
Although immunotherapy has been demonstrated to be promising in triple-negative (TN) breast cancer (BC), most BC cases are classified as non-TN. To enrich the responders for immunotherapy regardless of their subtypes, classification based on tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) levels and programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) status may be useful. However, this classification has not been fully applied to BC. Furthermore, suppressive subsets in the local tumor microenvironment, such as tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), which promote tumor progression, cannot be ignored to overcome immunotherapy resistance. The aims of the present study were to classify primary BC cases based on the TIL levels and PD-L1 status, and to identify suppressive immune subsets in each categorized group. A retrospective analysis of 73 patients with invasive BC was performed. The frequency of TILs was evaluated in HE-stained slides (10% cutoff), and PD-L1 levels (SP142; 1% cutoff), as well as immune subsets (CD3+, CD8+, FOXP3+, CD20+, CD68+ and CD204+ cells) were assessed using immunohistochemistry. It was revealed that 22% (16/73) of the tumors were categorized as TIL+PD-L1+, of which 69% (11/16) were TN type. By contrast, 66% (48/73) of the tumors were categorized as TIL-PD-L1-, of which 77% (37/48) were HR+ and HER2- types. The number of CD204+ M2-type macrophages was significantly associated with high histological grade (P=0.0246) and high Ki-67 (P=0.0152), whereas CD68+ macrophages were not associated with these factors. Furthermore, CD204+ macrophages and FOXP3+ Tregs accumulated in 88% (14/16) and 63% (10/16) of TIL+PD-L1+ tumors, respectively, compared with 20.8% (10/48) and 27.1% (13/48) of TIL-PD-L1- tumors. In conclusion, 22% of BC tumors were classified as TIL+PD-L1+ (69% were TN), which were enriched with suppressive immune subsets. These cell types may serve as potential novel immunotherapeutic targets. Copyright: © Nagano et al.Entities:
Keywords: CD204+ macrophages; breast cancer; programmed death ligand-1; tumor-associated macrophages; tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262828 PMCID: PMC7693484 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2020.12297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967