Abstract

The relationship between apoptosis and tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) was studied in situ in 60 breast carcinomas (18 G1, 28 G2 and 14 G3 carcinomas) using simultaneous apoptosis (TUNEL method) and macrophage staining (anti-CD68 antibody). Apoptotic tumor cell rate (ATCR), total TAM content (TAM(TOT)) and the proportion of TAM that had either cell-to-cell contact with apoptotic tumor cells or that were phagocytosing them (TAM/APO cells) were quantified. ATCR correlated significantly with TAM(TOT). Within all apoptotic tumor cells, the proportion of TAM/APO cells was lower than 20%. Considering the fact that cell-to-cell contact is essential for macrophage-mediated tumor cell killing, our data suggest that the majority of apoptoses occurring in breast cancer may not be caused by macrophage tumoricidal activity. TAM/APO cells accounted for only 1.7% of all TAM. Thus, tumor cell killing and apoptotic tumor cell phagocytosis seem to be quantitatively less important functions of TAM in human breast cancer in vivo.

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