Abstract
ABSTRACT The nasopharyngeal epithelium is highly susceptible to pathogenic infection. More than 95% of nasopharyngeal carcinomas (NPCs) are Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-associated epithelial cancers densely infiltrated with EBV-free lymphocytes. It remains unknown whether the immune modulating effects of concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) on the tumor-infiltrating T-cell priming against EBV, tumor-associated antigens, and/or neoantigens can elicit systemic anti-tumor immunity and decrease recurrence or distant metastasis. Using matched EBV-associated NPCs, nasopharyngeal mucosal tissues, and longitudinal serial peripheral blood samples, we explored the spatiotemporal and quantitative changes in expansion and contraction of intratumoral T-cell clonotypes (ITCs) in peripheral blood samples from before, during, and after CCRT. The pre-treatment nasopharyngeal ITC repertoire contained unique mucosa-resident and commonly system-shared T-cell receptors (TCRs), portraying an individualized tumor-associated and/or metagenomic landscape. We found that the long-term disease-free patients had significantly more robust unique mucosa-resident ITCs that migrated into and expanded in the peripheral blood after CCRT than in the patients with recurrence or distant metastasis (Mann–Whitney U test, p = .0110). However, the system-shared productive ITC TCRs specific to the common viruses, such as EBV, cytomegalovirus, and influenzaA, in all the patients with and without recurrence demonstrated almost no expansion after CCRT. Thus, these findings underline the importance of determining the impact of unique intratumoral immune responses, reflected in the peripheral blood, on disease prognosis after treatment and challenge of mechanistically understanding the common systemic immune evasion of EBV in NPC patients.
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