4.6 Article

Prognostic role of immune environment in luminal B early breast cancer

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages 8278-8288

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.5642

Keywords

anti-cancer immunity; checkpoint molecules; luminal B breast cancer; predictive; prognostic

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the impact of immune biomarkers on the prognosis of luminal breast cancer patients. The results showed no statistically significant differences in immune biomarkers between patients with relapse and those without relapse. However, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were found to be higher in patients without relapse, and GAL-9 expression was consistently detected in these patients. Further research on these trends in checkpoint molecule expression is warranted.
The importance of the immune microenvironment in triple negative and HER2amplified breast cancer (BC) is well-established; less is known about the immune environment in luminal breast cancers. We aimed to assess for the impact of immune biomarkers on BC outcome in a group of luminal B patients with archived tissue and annotated clinical information. Patients with early breast cancer (EBC) treated in a single institution over a 14-year period, with prospectively collected data were included. Luminal B EBC patients were identified and defined into three cohorts: A: grade 2 or 3, ER & PR positive, HER2-negative; B: Any grade, ER positive, PR and HER2-negative (Ki67 >= 14% in cohorts A & B); and C: Any grade, ER or PR positive, HER2-positive. Within each cohort, patients with a relapsed BC event (R) were compared on a 1:1 basis with a control patient (C) who remained disease free, balanced for key characteristics in an effort to balance the contribution of each clinical group to outcome. Archival breast, involved and uninvolved axillary nodes were assessed by immunohistochemistry for biomarkers identifying effector and suppressor immune cells, and compared between R and C. In total, 120 patients were included (80, 22, and 18 patients in cohorts A, B, and C, respectively). R were 1.5 years older (p = 0.016), with all other characteristics being balanced. Overall, there were no statistically significant differences in immune biomarkers in breast or nodal tissue of R and C. However, there was a trend toward higher levels of TILs in breast tumors of C, while GAL-9 was consistently expressed on lymphocytes and tumor cells in all breast and nodes of C and was absent from all tissues of R. These trends in checkpoint molecule expression deserve further research.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available