| Literature DB >> 35567670 |
Gemma M Wilson1, Phuong Dinh2, Nirmala Pathmanathan2, J Dinny Graham3,4.
Abstract
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a non-obligate precursor of invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC), whereby if left untreated, approximately 12% of patients develop invasive disease. The current standard of care is surgical removal of the lesion, to prevent potential progression, and radiotherapy to reduce risk of recurrence. There is substantial overtreatment of DCIS patients, considering not all DCIS lesions progress to invasive disease. Hence, there is a critical imperative to better predict which DCIS lesions are destined for poor outcome and which are not, allowing for tailored treatment. Active surveillance is currently being trialed as an alternative management practice, but this approach relies on accurately identifying cases that are at low risk of progression to invasive disease. Two DCIS-specific genomic profiling assays that attempt to distinguish low and high-risk patients have emerged, but imperfections in risk stratification coupled with a high price tag warrant the continued search for more robust and accessible prognostic biomarkers. This search has largely turned researchers toward the tumor microenvironment. Recent evidence suggests that a spectrum of cell types within the DCIS microenvironment are genetically and phenotypically altered compared to normal tissue and play critical roles in disease progression. Uncovering the molecular mechanisms contributing to DCIS progression has provided optimism for the search for well-validated prognostic biomarkers that can accurately predict the risk for a patient developing IDC. The discovery of such markers would modernize DCIS management and allow tailored treatment plans. This review will summarize the current literature regarding DCIS diagnosis, treatment, and pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer progression; Ductal carcinoma in situ; Immune infiltration; Microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35567670 PMCID: PMC9135892 DOI: 10.1007/s10911-022-09517-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mammary Gland Biol Neoplasia ISSN: 1083-3021 Impact factor: 2.698
Fig. 1Ductal carcinoma in situ progression. A Progression of normal tissue to ductal carcinoma in situ, to ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion, to invasive ductal carcinoma. Drawing created with BioRender.com. B-E Immunoperoxidase staining of myoepithelial marker, p63 in: B Normal breast tissue, C ductal carcinoma in situ, D ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion (indicated by arrows), and E invasive ductal carcinoma. Scale bar representative of 100 µm.
Staining pattern and distribution of common myoepithelial cell markers in the breast. Adapted from [95, 123–125]
| α-SMA | Cytoplasmic | 3 + | 3 + | 3 + | 0 |
| Calponin | Cytoplasmic | 3 + | 1 + | 2 + | 1 + |
| CD10 | Membranous | 2 + | 1 + | 0 | 1 + |
| P63 | Nuclear | 3 + | 0 | 0 | 1 + |
| SMMHC | Cytoplasmic | 3 + | 1 + | 2 + | 0 |
VSMC Vascular smooth muscle cell. Expression score (frequency and intensity): 0 = Not Detected, 1 + = Low, 2 + = Intermediate, 3 + = High
Summary of current active surveillance trials
| LORIS | LORD (Netherlands) [ | COMET (USA) [ | LORETTA (Japan) [ | LARRIKIN (AUS & NZ) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recruitment start date | 2014 | 2017 | 2017 | 2017 | n/s |
| Follow-up (years) | 10 | 10 | 10 | 5 | 10 |
| Primary endpoints | 5 years; invasive IBE-free survival rate | 10 years; invasive IBE-free survival rate | 2 years: invasive IBE rate 5, 7 years: Invasive IBE rate | 5 years; invasive IBE rate | invasive IBE-free survival rate |
| Secondary endpoints | n/s | Time to: IBE grade III DCIS, DCIS CBE, invasive CBE, treatment, distant metastases free interval, overall survival | 2 years: MST/BCS rate, invasive CBE rate, overall and disease specific survival 5, 7 years: Overall and disease specific survival | 5 years; invasive IBE rate, disease specific survival, invasive CBE-free survival rate, surgery rate, time to surgery, time-to-treatment failure, adverse events | Rate of invasive disease and rate of higher-grade DCIS in final specimen |
| Phase | III | III | III | III | III |
| Study arm 1 | Surgery + AS | Surgery ± RT ± HT + AS | Surgery ± RT ± HT + AS | HT | Surgery ± RT + AS |
| Study arm 2 | AS | AS | AS* | n/a | AS |
| Age | ≧46 | ≧45 | ≧40 | 40–75 | ≧55 |
| Grade | 1 or 2 | 1 | 1 or 2 | 1 or 2 | 1 or 2 |
| Size (cm) | n/s | Any size | n/s | ≦2.5 cm | ≦2.5 cm |
| Comedo necrosis | Excluded | n/s | Eligible | Excluded | Excluded |
| HR positivity | n/s | n/s | ER + and/or PR + and HER2- | ER + and HER2- | ER/PR + and HER2- |
| Biopsy method | VACB | VACB | VACB or Surgical biopsy | CNB or VACB | n/s |
| Imaging type | MMG | MMG | MMG | MMG, US and MRI | MMG |
| Imaging criteria | Screen detected by calcifications only | Screen detected by calcifications only | Screen detected by calcifications only | Screen detected by calcifications only | Screen detected by calcifications or tumor mass |
| Palpable mass | Excluded | Excluded | Excluded | Excluded | n/s |
| History of BC | Excluded | Excluded | Excluded | Excluded | n/s |
| Target cohort size | 932 | 1240 | 1200 | 340 | 470 |
IBE Ipsilateral breast event, CBE Contralateral breast event, MST Mastectomy, BCS Breast conserving surgery, AS Active surveillance (annual mammogram), AS* Active surveillance (6 monthly mammogram), RT Radiotherapy, HT Hormone therapy, ER Estrogen receptor, PR Progesterone receptor, HER2 Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, VACB Vacuum assisted core biopsy, CNB Core needle biopsy, MMG Mammogram, US Ultrasound, MRI Magnetic resonance imaging, BC Breast cancer, n/s Not specified, n/a Not applicable
Fig. 2Models of ductal carcinoma in situ progression. Overview of the four theorized models of ductal carcinoma in situ progression. Drawing created with BioRender.com.
Association between clinicopathologic features and DCIS recurrence in four meta-analyses [66–69]
| Association between clinical feature and overall clinical outcome (overall IBE and mortality) | Association between clinical feature and overall recurrence rates (DCIS and/or invasive) | Association between clinical feature and invasive breast cancer recurrence rates | Association between clinical feature and invasive breast cancer recurrence rates | |
| n/s | Minimum 100 cases per study (excluding biomarker analyses) | Minimum 100 cases per study, females only, HR, OR, or RR data with 95% CI, outcome data on ipsilateral invasive breast cancer | At least 1 year follow-up, more than 10 invasive recurrences in cohort | |
| 133 | 37 | 18 | 40 | |
| 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 RCT + 1 nRCT (non-randomized- ECOG trial E5194) | |
| 64 | 26 | 13 | 31 | |
| All studies consistently showed young age as a risk predictor of IBE, with one RCT finding women under 49 to have a 117% increased risk of IBE (HR = 2.17, 95% CI = 1.61 to 2.94). Similarly, premenopausal women are at significantly increased risk of invasive IBE compared to postmenopausal women | Not assessed | Not assessed | Premenopausal status significantly increased risk of invasive IBE (ES: 1.59: 95% CI: 1.20–2.11) | |
| Unadjusted results show African American DCIS patients have significantly increased mortality (RR = 1.35, 95% CI = 1.12 to 1.62) and invasive IBE (RR = 1.50 95% CI = 1.2 to 2) rates compared to Caucasian women | Not assessed | Not assessed | African American women have a significantly increased risk of invasive IBE (ES: 1.43: 95% CI: 1.15–1.79) | |
| RCT showed risk of IBE is significantly increased for symptomatic DCIS patients (RR = 1.9, 95% CI = 1.36 to 2.65) compared to patients detected by mammography | Women with palpable mass or other symptoms were significantly associated with an increased risk of IBE (HR = 1.35, 95% CI = 1.12–1.62) | A significant association between symptomatic (or non-screen detected) DCIS and increased risk of invasive IBE compared to screen detected DCIS (HR = 1.38, 95% CI = 1.12–1.63) | Detection by palpitation was significantly associated with increased risk of invasive IBE (ES: 1.84: 95% CI: 1.47–2.29) | |
| Overweight (RR = 2.3, 95% CI = 1.1 to 4.8) and obese (RR = 5.0, 95% CI = 1.1 to 10.8) patients are at significantly increased risk of invasive IBE | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | |
| Risk of IBE was significantly associated with positive family history of breast cancer (HR = 3.08, 95% CI = 1.04 to 9.1) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | |
| NSABB project B17 trial found that IBE rates are higher in women with higher breast density compared to women with lower breast density (RR = 2.8, 95% CI = 1.3–2.8) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | |
| Tumor size positively correlated with high risk of IBE, however not significant | Significant association between increased tumor size and increased risk of IBE (HR = 1.63 95% CI = 1.30–2.06) * | Inconsistent results among studies, no association | Not assessed | |
| Significant association between positive margins and increased risk of IBE. Margins greater or equal to 10 mm were associated with the largest reduction of risk (98%) | Significant association between positive margins and increased risk of IBE (HR = 2.25, 95% CI = 1.77–2.85) * | Significant association between positive margins and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.36, 95% CI = 1.04–1.69) I2 = 39.7 | Significant association between positive margins and increased risk of invasive IBE (ES: 1.63: 95% CI: 1.14–2.32) | |
| Significant association between high grade and increased risk of IBE (HH = 2.04, 95% CI = 1.63–2.56) | Significant association between high grade and increased risk of IBE (HR = 1.81, 95% CI = 1.53–2.13) | Non-significant association between high grade (HR = 1.04; 95% CI = 0.84–1.24) and increased risk of invasive IBE | Significant association between high grade and increased risk of invasive IBE (ES: 1.36: 95% CI: 1.04–1.77) | |
| Not assessed | Significant association between multifocality and increased risk of IBE (HR = 1.95, 95%CI = 1.59–2.40) | Non-significant association between multifocality and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.34, 95% CI = 0.82–1.87) | Not assessed | |
| For lumpectomy patients, there is a significant association between comedonecrosis and increased risk of IBE (HR of 2.16, 95% CI = 1.26–3.69) | Significant association between comedonecrosis and increased risk of IBE (HR = 1.71, 95% CI = 1.36-.16) * | Non-significant association between comedonecrosis and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.18, 95% CI = 0.98–1.37) I2 = 4.2 | Non-significant association between comedonecrosis and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.25, 95% CI = 0.98–1.6) | |
| Non-significant association between ER positivity and reduced risk of IBE | Significant association between ER positivity and reduced risk of IBE (HR = 0.39, 95% CI = 0.18–0.86) | Non-significant association between ER positivity and decreased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 0.74), 95% CI = 0.36–1.12) | No association found | |
| Not assessed | Non-significant association between PR positivity and reduced risk of IBE (HR = 0.56, 95% CI = 0.25–1.24) | Non-significant association between PR positivity and decreased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 0.89), 95% CI = 0.47–1.31) | Non-significant association between PR positivity and reduced risk of invasive IBE (HR = 0.80, 95% CI = 0.61–1.05) | |
| Significant association between HER2 positivity and increased risk of IBE | Significant association between HER2 positivity and increased risk of IBE (HR = 3.07, 95% CI = 1.32, 7.12) | Non-significant association between HER2 positivity and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.25, 95% CI = 0.7–1.81) | Non-significant association between HER2 positivity and increased risk of invasive IBE (HR = 1.1, 95% CI = 0.75–1.62) | |
| Women in higher risk categories had higher rates of IBE, the greatest increase was seen comparing women with VNPI scores of 5–7 to women with scores of 3–4, with HR of 8.4 (3.34–21.13) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | |
DCIS Ductal carcinoma in situ, IBE Ipsilateral breast event, n/s Not specified, HR Hazard ratio, RR Risk ratio, CI Confidence interval, ES Pooled estimate, RCT Randomized controlled trial, ER Estrogen receptor, PR Progesterone receptor, HER2 Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, Van Nuys prognostic index
*Significant degree of heterogeneity between studies
Features of the Oncotype-DX DCIS and DCISionRT commercial tests
| Cost | ~ $3000 USD | ~ $1500 USD |
| Type of molecular signature | Gene expression via RT-PCR | Biomarker expression via IHC coupled with clinical features |
| Genes/markers/clinical features | Ki-67, STK15, Survivin, CCNB1, MYBL2, PR, GSTM1 (cancer related genes) & ACTB, GAPDH, RPLPO, GUS, TFRC (housekeeping genes) | COX2, FOXA1, HER2, Ki-67, p16/CDKN2A, PR, SIAH2 (IHC) and patient age, tumor size, margin status and palpability |
| Range of score | ||
| Scoring risk of local recurrence | Low risk score < 39 Intermediate risk score = 39–54 High risk score | low risk score < 3 high risk score > 3 |
Molecular changes in DCIS (pure and mixed) and IDC tissue and their prognostic significance
| VAV2 in tumor cells | Activates the Rho family of GTPases and induces EMT | Cell membrane of normal epithelial cells | Similar expression in DCIS compared to normal ( | Significantly higher expression in mixed DCIS lesions compared to pure ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Jiang et al. 2014 [ |
| Thioredoxin interacting protein (TXNIP) in tumor cells | Negative regulator of antioxidant thioredoxin with growth suppressing and pro-apoptotic functions | Cytoplasmic expression in luminal and myoepithelial cells | Reduced expression in DCIS tumor cells compared to normal epithelial cells | Significantly higher expression in pure DCIS cells compared to mixed DCIS cells ( | Significantly higher expression in DCIS cells compared to adjacent IDC cells ( | High expression is associated with longer local recurrence-free survival ( | High expression is associated with low grade ( | Miligy et al. 2018 [ |
| Legumain in fibroblasts | Proteolytic enzyme that regulates cell proliferation | Negative or faint expression in normal fibroblasts | Cytoplasmic expression in DCIS fibroblasts | Significantly more mixed DCIS cases showed high fibroblast expression compared to pure DCIS ( | Significantly higher expression in fibroblasts of IDC compared to fibroblasts of the adjacent DCIS ( | Not associated with recurrence | High expression in fibroblasts of pure DCIS tissue is associated with high grade ( | Toss et al. 2019 [ |
| Legumain in tumor cells | Proteolytic enzyme that regulates cell proliferation | Negative or faint expression in epithelial cells | Cytoplasmic staining of DCIS tumor cells | Significantly more mixed DCIS cases showed high tumor cell expression compared to pure ( | Significantly higher expression of legumain in the IDC tumor cells compared to the adjacent DCIS cells ( | High tumor cell expression associated with shorter LRFI ( | High tumor cell expression in pure DCIS is associated with high grade ( | Toss et al. 2019 [ |
| Cathepsin V in fibroblasts | Lysosomal cysteine proteinase involved in ECM degradation | Negative or faint expression in fibroblasts | 20% of pure DCIS cases had high stromal CTSV | Significantly more mixed DCIS cases showed high stromal expression of CTSV compared to pure ( | Significantly higher expression in stroma of IDC compared to adjacent DCIS ( | High stromal expression is associated with high rate of all ipsilateral recurrences ( | High stromal cell CTSV associated with larger tumor size ( | Toss et al. 2020 [ |
| Cathepsin V in tumor cells | Lysosomal cysteine proteinase involved in ECM degradation | Negative or faint expression in epithelial cells | 29% of pure DCIS cases had high tumor cell CTSV | Significantly more mixed DCIS cases showed high tumor cell expression of CTSV compared to pure ( | Significantly higher expression in IDC tumor cells compared to adjacent DCIS cells ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with shorter LRFI for pure DCIS patients ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with high grade ( | Toss et al. 2020 [ |
| Cathepsin A in tumor cells | Lysosomal serine proteinase involved in ECM remodeling, resistance to apoptosis, cell proliferation | Negative or faint expression in epithelial cells | Increased expression in DCIS tumor cells | Higher proportion of mixed DCIS cases show high expression compared to pure DCIS cases ( | Significantly higher expression in IDC tumor cells compared to the adjacent DCIS cells ( | Higher CTSA expression is associated with shorter LRFI ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with high grade ( | Toss et al. 2019 [ |
| Prolyl-4-hydroxylase A subunit 2 (P4HA2) in tumor cells | Enzyme for ECM remodeling | Negative or faint expression in epithelial cells | Significantly higher proportion of mixed DCIS cases show high tumor cell expression compared to pure DCIS cases ( | No expression difference between IDC tumor cells and adjacent DCIS cells ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with ipsilateral local recurrence ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with older age ( | Toss et al. 2018 [ | |
| Prolyl-4-hydroxylase A subunit 2 (P4HA2) in fibroblasts | Enzyme for ECM remodeling | Significantly higher stromal expression in mixed DCIS tissue compared to pure DCIS tissue ( | Significantly higher stromal expression in IDC compared to adjacent DCIS ( | Not associated with recurrence | High stromal expression is associated with symptomatic DCIS ( | Toss et al. 2018 [ | ||
| COL11A1 in fibroblasts | Component of collagen for ECM remodeling | Low expression in fibroblasts | High expression in DCIS fibroblasts | Significantly higher stromal expression in mixed DCIS compared to pure DCIS ( | Significantly higher stromal expression in IDC compared to adjacent DCIS ( | High expression is an independent predictor of shorter LRFI ( | High stromal expression is associated with ER negativity ( | Toss et al. 2019 [ |
| COL11A1 in tumor cells | Component of collagen for ECM remodeling | Negative expression in epithelial cells | High expression in DCIS cells | Significantly higher expression in mixed DCIS tumor cells compared to pure DCIS tumor cells ( | Significantly higher expression in IDC tumor cells compared to adjacent DCIS cells ( | High tumor cell expression is associated with shorter LRFI for all recurrences ( | Low expression is associated with PR positivity ( | Toss et al. 2019 [ |
| MMP8 in myoepithelial cells | Tumor suppressive MMP8 which opposes MMP9 tumor promoting activity and downregulates TGF-beta in myoepithelial cells | High expression in myoepithelial cells | 45% and 81% of pure DCIS and mixed DCIS respectively, were negative for MMP8 | MMP8 expression was significantly reduced in mixed DCIS tissue compared to pure DCIS tissue ( | No myoepithelial cells in IDC | No recurrence data | Sarper et al. 2017 [ | |
| Stefin A in myoepithelial cells | Protease inhibitor to inhibit ECM remodeling | High expression in myoepithelial cells | Myoepithelial cells from low grade DCIS showed similar expression to normal, but intermediate grade ( | Myoepithelial cells from DCIS tumors with microinvasion did not express any Stefin A | No myoepithelial cells in IDC | No recurrence data | Duivenvoorden et al. 2017 [ | |
| Integrin αvβ6 in myoepithelial cells | Receptor for ECM remodeling proteins | Negative expression in myoepithelial cells | 69% of high grade and 52% of non-high-grade DCIS cases showed myoepithelial expression of αvβ6 compared to 0% expression in normal tissue | A significantly higher proportion of mixed DCIS cases showed positive expression of αvβ6 compared to pure DCIS cases ( | No myoepithelial cells in IDC | Significant association between high αvβ6 expression and recurrence or progression ( | Allen et al. 2014 [ |
LFRI Local recurrence free interval, DCIS Ductal carcinoma in situ, EMT Epithelial to mesenchymal transition, ER Estrogen receptor, HER2 Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, CTSV Cathepsin V, CTSA Cathepsin A, P4HA2 Prolyl-4-hydroxylase A subunit 2
Fig. 3Microenvironment changes accompanying ductal carcinoma in situ progression. Changes to the microenvironment as normal tissue becomes progressively more neoplastic, along the ductal carcinoma in situ to invasive ductal carcinoma continuum. Development of fully confined “pure ductal carcinoma in situ” lesions are accompanied by measurable changes to the microenvironment, including myoepithelial and stromal alterations and increased immune infiltrate. These changes are progressively more distorted in “mixed ductal carcinoma in situ” lesions adjacent to invasive ductal carcinoma. Finally, development of invasive ductal carcinoma is accompanied by total loss of the myoepithelium, further stromal alterations and an immunosuppressive immune phenotype. Drawing created with BioRender.com.
Immune cell infiltrate in pure and mixed DCIS tissue and association with clinical features and DCIS outcome
| Cell type | Immune cell in pure DCIS vs mixed DCIS (including microinvasion) | Immune cell association with clinical features | Immune cell association with outcome | Cohort details | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not assessed | High infiltrate of CD4+ , CD8+ and FOXP3+ TILs and the presence of PD-L1+ immune cells were associated with high nuclear grade ( | Not assessed | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & Mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS tissue had significantly more TILs compared to pure DCIS ( | ER- DCIS contained higher numbers of TILs compared to ER+ DCIS | DCIS lesions which recurred (DCIS or invasive) had higher numbers of TILs compared to DCIS lesions that did not recur | Pure DCIS (n = 24) & Mixed DCIS (n = 3) | Thompson et al. 2016 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS lesions had significantly fewer immune cells (CD45) compared with pure DCIS lesions ( | Not assessed | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 19) & Mixed DCIS (n = 11) | Mitchell et al. 2020 [ | |
| Higher density of TILs in mixed DCIS tissue compared to pure DCIS lesions | Increased TIL density was significantly associated with high Ki-67 index, ER negativity, PR negativity, p53, HIF1alpha | High TIL density was associated with all recurrences ( | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & Mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| High density of TILs in mixed DCIS tissue compared to pure DCIS ( | Dense TILs are associated with younger age ( | Univariate analysis: dense TILs are associated with shorter RFI for all patients ( | Pure DCIS (n = 534) & mixed DCIS (n = 132) | Toss et al. 2018 [ | |
| Not assessed | TIL density was significantly higher in high grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS only (n = 138) | Hendry et al. 2017 [ | |
| Not assessed | High grade DCIS had significantly higher TIL infiltrate ( | No association | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| No association | High TIL density was significantly associated with high nuclear grade ( | High TIL density is significantly associated with recurrence ( | Pure DCIS (n = 186) & DCIS with microinvasion (n = 12) | Thike et al. 2020 [ | |
| Significantly higher proportion of T cells in mixed DCIS compared to pure DCIS ( | High T cell infiltrate was significantly associated with high nuclear grade ( | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 40) & mixed DCIS (n = 30) | Gil Del Alzazar et al. 2017 [ | |
| Significantly higher proportion of CD3+ cells ( | Not assessed | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 19) & mixed DCIS (n = 11) | Mitchell et al. 2020 [ | |
| Significantly higher proportion of CD3+ cells in mixed DCIS lesions compared to pure DCIS lesions ( | High stromal CD3+ expression is associated with high nuclear grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS ( | High CD4+ infiltrate was associated with high nuclear grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| No difference between cohorts | Not assessed | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 19) & mixed DCIS (n = 11) | Mitchell et al. 2020 [ | |
| No difference in stromal or intratumoural CD4+ | High stromal CD4+ cells associated with high nuclear grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | High grade DCIS had significantly higher percentages of CD4+ T cells ( | No association | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| CD4+ infiltrate was significantly higher in microinvasive lesions compared to pure DCIS lesions ( | High CD4+ infiltrate was significantly associated with high nuclear grade ( | Non-significant trend between high CD4+ T cell density and recurrence ( | Pure DCIS (n = 186) & DCIS with microinvasion (n = 12) | Thike et al. 2020 [ | |
| In HR- tumors, DCIS-mixed contained significantly higher CD8+ T cell infiltrate than in pure DCIS ( | High CD8+ infiltrate was associated with high nuclear grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| There was a significantly higher proportion of CD8+ T cells ( | Not assessed | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 19) & mixed DCIS (n = 11) | Mitchell et al. 2020 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS lesions contained significantly higher stromal CD8+ ( | High stromal CD8+ cells associated with younger age ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | CD8+ infiltrate was associated with lymph node involvement ( | Low CD8+ Infiltrate was associated with relapse ( | Pure DCIS (n = 199) & mixed DCIS (49) | Semeraro et al. 2016 [ | |
| Not assessed | CD8+ cells were associated with high grade, HER2 positivity and HR negativity ( | Highest risk of recurrence was cases with low numbers of activated CD8+ HLADR+ cells (P < 0.00001). Cases with high numbers of CD8+ HLADR+ and low numbers of CD8+ HLADR- cells were at low risk of recurrence | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| DCIS-microinvasion contained significantly higher FOXP3+ infiltrate than pure DCIS ( | High FOXP3+ infiltrate was associated with high nuclear grade ( | For pure DCIS patients, high FOXP3+ infiltrate associated with decreased recurrence-free survival ( | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | High numbers of FOXP3+ cells are associated with high nuclear grade ( | DCIS tumors with high number of Tregs indicated a worse recurrence free survival ( | Pure DCIS only (n = 62) | Bates et al. 2006 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS lesions contained significantly higher stromal FOXP3 + (P = 0.016) | High stromal FOXP3+ cells were associated with high nuclear grade ( | High expression of stromal FOXP3+ T cells ( | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | No difference in proportion of FOXP3+ T cells between DCIS grades | No outcome data | Mixed DCIS only (n = 32) | Lal et al. 2013 [ | |
| There was a significantly lower proportion of FOXP3+ T cells in the immune infiltrate of mixed DCIS tissue than in pure DCIS tissue ( | Not assessed | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 19) & mixed DCIS (n = 11) | Mitchell et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | High grade DCIS had significantly higher percentages of FOXP3+ T cells ( | No association | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| Not assessed | There were more CD4+ T cells than CD8+ T cells in the HR+ pure DCIS ( | High FOXP3+ /CD8+ TIL ratio ( | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| No association | High CD4/CD8 ratios were significantly associated with PD-L1 expression in both DCIS ( | High CD4/CD8+ T cell ratio was associated with shorter disease-free survival ( | Pure DCIS (n = 186) & DCIS with microinvasion (n = 12) | Thike et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | High CD8/FOXP3+ ratio associated with lymph node involvement and high CD8+ infiltrate | Low CD8/FOXP3 ratio associated with relapse ( | Pure DCIS (n = 199) & mixed DCIS (49) | Semeraro et al. 2016 [ | |
| No difference in PD-L1+ infiltrate between pure, DCIS with microinvasion and DCIS mixed | High PD-L1+ infiltrate was associated with high nuclear grade ( | For pure DCIS patients, high PD-L1+ immune cells found to be associated with decreased recurrence free survival ( | Pure DCIS (n = 231) & mixed DCIS (n = 81) | Kim et al. 2020 [ | |
| No association | 100% of Triple negative DCIS had high expression of PD-L1 + on tumor infiltrating lymphocytes ( | All DCIS patients with concurrent IDC or recurrent DCIS had high PDL-1+ TILs, but not statistically significant | Pure DCIS (n = 24) & mixed DCIS (n = 3) | Thompson et al. 2016 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS lesions contained significantly higher stromal PD-L1 expression ( | High stromal PD-L1+ expression was associated with high nuclear grade ( | High expression of stromal PD-L1+ was associated with shorter LRFI for all recurrences ( | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | PD-L1+ expressing tumors (in any compartment) were more likely to be ER- ( | PDL1 expression was not related to recurrence (79 cases) | Pure DCIS only (n = 79) | Hendry et al. 2017 [ | |
| Not assessed | PD-L1 + expression is significantly higher in HER2+ tumors compared to HER2- tumors ( | No outcome data | Pure DCIS only (n = 85) | Ubago et al. 2019 [ | |
| Not assessed | High grade DCIS had significantly higher percentages of CD68+ macrophages ( | Cases with high CD8+ HLADR+ cells, but also high numbers of non-activated CD8+ HLADR− cells and high numbers of CD115+ cells were also at a high risk for recurrence ( | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| Not assessed | High CD68+ macrophage density was associated with high nuclear grade ( | High CD68+ macrophage density was significantly associated with worse DFS for ipsilateral invasive recurrence ( | Pure DCIS (n = 186) & DCIS with microinvasion (n = 12) | Chen et al. 2020 [ | |
| No association | There was no correlation between Intratumoral CD163 expression and DCIS grade but there was a trend for higher stromal CD163 expression in high grade DCIS (although not statistically significant) | No outcome data | Pure DCIS (n = 30) & mixed DCIS (n = 27) | Hoskoppal et al. 2018 [ | |
| Mixed DCIS lesions contained significantly higher stromal CD20 ( | High stromal expression of CD20+ was associated with HR negativity but high intratumoural CD20+ was associated with ER and PR positivity. High stromal CD20+ was associated with high nuclear grade ( | No association | Pure DCIS (n = 508) & mixed DCIS (n = 192) | Toss et al. 2020 [ | |
| Not assessed | High grade DCIS had significantly higher percentages of CD20+ B cells ( | No association | Pure DCIS only (n = 117) | Campbell et al. 2017 [ | |
| Significantly more CD20+ B cells intratumorally in pure DCIS compared to mixed DCIS ( | In pure DCIS cases, Dense CD20+ B cell infiltrate was associated significantly with larger tumor size ( | DCIS lesions with less stromal B lymphocytes were significantly associated with a longer RFS ( | Pure DCIS (n = 36) & mixed DCIS (n = 44) | Miligy et al. 2017 [ |
DCIS Ductal Carcinoma in situ, RFI Recurrence-free interval, DFS Disease free survival, TILs Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, PD-L1 Programmed cell death ligand 1