| Literature DB >> 33920514 |
Giovanni Centonze1,2, Vincenzo Lagano1, Giovanna Sabella1, Alessandro Mangogna3, Giovanna Garzone1, Martina Filugelli1, Beatrice Belmonte4, Laura Cattaneo1, Valentina Crisafulli1, Alessio Pellegrinelli5, Michele Simbolo6, Aldo Scarpa6,7, Paola Spaggiari8, Tatiana Brambilla8, Sara Pusceddu9, Natalie Prinzi9, Andrea Anichini2, Claudio Tripodo4, Massimo Milione1.
Abstract
High-grade Gastroenteropancreatic Neuroendocrine neoplasms (H-NENs) comprehend well-differentiated tumors (NET G3) and poorly differentiated carcinomas (NEC) with proliferative activity indexes as mitotic count (MC) >20 mitoses/10 HPF and Ki-67 >20%. At present, no specific therapy for H-NENs exists and the several evidences of microenvironment involvement in their pathogenesis pave the way for tailored therapies. Forty-five consecutive cases, with available information about T-cell, immune, and non-immune markers, from surgical pathology and clinical databases of 2 Italian institutions were immunostained for Arginase, CD33, CD163 and CD66 myeloid markers. The association between features was assessed by Spearman's correlation coefficient. A unsupervised K-means algorithm was used to identify clusters of patients according to inputs of microenvironment features and the relationship between clusters and clinicopathological features, including cancer-specific survival (CSS), was analyzed. The H-NEN population was composed of 6 (13.3%) NET G3 and 39 (86.7%) NEC. Overall, significant positive associations were found between myeloid (CD33, CD163 and Arginase) and T/immune markers (CD3, CD4, CD8, PD-1 and HLA-I). Myeloid and T-cell markers CD3 and CD8 identified two clusters of patients from unsupervised K-means analysis. Cases grouped in cluster 1 with more myeloid infiltrates, T cell, HLA and expression of inhibitory receptors and ligands in the stroma (PD-1, PD-L1) had significantly better CSS than patients in cluster 2. Multivariable analysis showed that Ki-67 (>55 vs. <55, HR 8.60, CI 95% 2.61-28.33, p < 0.0001) and cluster (1 vs. 2, HR 0.43, CI 95% 0.20-0.93, p = 0.03) were significantly associated with survival. High grade gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms can be further classified into two prognostic sub-populations of tumors driven by different tumor microenvironments and immune features able to generate the framework for evaluating new therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms; myeloid markers; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2021 PMID: 33920514 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10081741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241