4.6 Article

Immune system and prognosis in colorectal cancer: a detailed immunohistochemical analysis

Journal

LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
Volume 84, Issue 4, Pages 493-501

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/labinvest.3700055

Keywords

colorectal cancer; prognosis; tumor-infiltrating leukocytes; natural killer cells; microsatellite instability; extracellular matrix protein

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The efficacy of tumor cell-immune cell interactions depends on a number of factors, for example, the expression of HLA-I on tumor cells, the type of immune cell, the accessibility of tumor cells for immune cells and the expression of immunogenic epitopes. We assessed infiltration of CD4(+), CD8(+), CD56(+) and CD57(+) cells in the tumor epithelium, tumor stroma and advancing tumor margin of 93 colorectal carcinomas and correlated this to clinicopathological parameters, the expression of HLA-A and HLA-B/C on tumor cells, the presence of a basal membrane (BM)-like structure surrounding tumor nodules and the presence of microsatellite instability/ mutator phenotype (absent MLH-1 expression). The median intraepithelial CD4(+), CD8(+), CD56(+) and CD57(+) cell infiltrations were 3, 23, 0 and 0 cells/mm(2) tumor, respectively. HLA-A/BC expression by tumor cells was normal in 28/43%, heterogeneous in 59/48% and absent in 13/9% of the cases. A BM-like structure surrounding the tumor nodules was absent, present and thick in 47, 38 and 15% of the cases. Six cases lost MLH1 expression. There was a positive correlation between leukocyte infiltration in the three compartments for CD4(+), CD8(+), CD56(+) (partly) and CD57(+) (all P<0.05) cell infiltration. Intraepithelial CD8(+) cell infiltration inversely correlated with HLA-A (P=0.04) and HLA-B/C expression (P=0.04). Intraepithelial CD57(+) cell infiltration inversely correlated with HLA-B/C expression (P=0.04). Moreover, intraepithelial infiltration of CD8(+) and CD57+ cells was inversely correlated to the presence of a BM-like structure (P=0.003 and 0.04, respectively). Uni- and multivariate analyses showed that a lower tumor stage (P=0.004) and marked infiltration of CD8(+) (P=0.04) and CD57(+) cells (P=0.05) at the advancing tumor margin were independent prognostic factors for a longer disease-free survival. Loss of MLH1 expression was correlated with a significantly higher intraepithelial CD8(+) and CD57(+) cell infiltration. We conclude that infiltration of CD8(+) and CD57(+) cells are important prognostic factors in colorectal cancer. However, their interaction with tumor cells is inversely correlated to the presence of HLA-I on tumor cells and a thick BM-like structure around tumor islets. Our data indicate that NK cells might play an important role in the immune surveillance in colorectal cancer patients.

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