4.7 Article

The immune microenvironment of HPV-positive and HPV-negative oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma: a multiparametric quantitative and spatial analysis unveils a rationale to target treatment-naive tumors with immune checkpoint inhibitors

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02481-4

关键词

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; Human papillomavirus; Tumor microenvironment; Immunotherapy; Multiplex immunofluorescence; Oropharyngeal carcinoma; Gene expression profile; Sex

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资金

  1. Fondazione AIRC [21354, 22759]
  2. BIOV19ROSATO
  3. Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS
  4. Ministry of Health-Alliance Against Cancer (MoH-ACC) [RCR-2019-23669115]
  5. [ACC2021-WP06 RCR-2021-23671213]

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The study found that HPV-positive OPSCC patients have a more active immune microenvironment, with higher T cell infiltration and checkpoint molecule density, which may allow immune checkpoint inhibitors to be effective in treatment. Additionally, DFS is closely related to activating immune signatures, T cell density, and the spatial location of checkpoint cells.
Background Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) are approved for treatment of recurrent or metastatic oropharyngeal head and neck squamous cell carcinoma in the first- and second-line settings. However, only 15-20% of patients benefit from this treatment, a feature increasingly ascribed to the peculiar characteristics of the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). Methods Immune-related gene expression profiling (GEP) and multiplex immunofluorescence (mIF) including spatial proximity analysis, were used to characterize the TIME of 39 treatment-naive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (OPSCC) and the corresponding lymph node metastases. GEP and mIF results were correlated with disease-free survival (DFS). HPV-positive tumors disclosed a stronger activation of several immune signalling pathways, as well as a higher expression of genes related to total tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, CD8 T cells, cytotoxic cells and exhausted CD8 cells, than HPV-negative patients. Accordingly, mIF revealed that HPV-positive lesions were heavily infiltrated as compared to HPV-negative counterparts, with a higher density of T cells and checkpoint molecules. CD8+ T cells appeared in closer proximity to tumor cells, CD163+ macrophages and FoxP3+ cells in HPV-positive primary tumors, and related metastases. In HPV-positive lesions, PD-L1 expression was increased as compared to HPV-negative samples, and PD-L1+ tumor cells and macrophages were closer to PD-1+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Considering the whole cohort, a positive correlation was observed between DFS and higher levels of activating immune signatures and T cell responses, higher density of PD-1+ T cells and their closer proximity to tumor cells or PD-L1+ macrophages. HPV-positive patients with higher infiltration of T cells and macrophages had a longer DFS, while CD163+ macrophages had a negative role in prognosis of HPV-negative patients. Conclusions Our results suggest that checkpoint expression may reflect an ongoing antitumor immune response. Thus, these observations provide the rationale for the incorporation of ICI in the loco-regional therapy strategies for patients with heavily infiltrated treatment-naive OPSCC, and for the combination of ICI with tumor-specific T cell response inducers or TAM modulators for the cold OPSCC counterparts.

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