Abstract
BackgroundBladder cancer (BC) is highly immunogenic. Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) immunotherapy offers the best results in non–muscle-invasive BC (NMIBC). Natural killer cells (NKcs) play decisive roles in BCG-mediated immune response and in general cancer immune-surveillance. ObjectiveTo analyze killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs), their human leukocyte antigen class-I (HLA-I) ligands, and the expression of DNAX Accessory Molecule-1 (DNAM-1/CD226) on peripheral blood (PB) NKcs, to identify useful predictive biomarkers in BC. Design, setting, and participantsKIR/HLA-ligand genotypes were compared between 132 BC, 201 other solid cancers, 164 plasma cell disorders, and 615 healthy Caucasoid controls. CD226 expression was evaluated by flow cytometry. Outcome measurements and statistical analysisKIR/HLA-I interactions and CD226 expression on NKcs (CD226high or CD226low) were compared across study groups, cancer stages, treatments, and progression-free and overall survival of patients, using chi-square, analysis of variance/post hoc, Kaplan-Meier/log-rank, and regression analyses. Results and limitationsThree immunological risk groups were identified: low risk (KIR2DL1−L2+L3−/C1C1− and KIR2DL1+L2+L3+/C1C1+), intermediate risk (rest), and high risk (KIR2DL5+/HLA-C*16+ and KIR2DL1+L2+L3−), which displayed different 10-yr progression-free rates (83.3%, 48.6%, and 0%, respectively; p<0.001) and survival rates (83.3%, 54.3%, and 6.2%, respectively; p<0.001) for muscle-invasive T2/T4, and 10-yr progression-free rates (100%, 81.6%, and 50%, respectively; p<0.05) for NMIBC-T1 treated with BCG. Immunological risk stratification had an independent prognostic value to just histological staging for survival (hazard ratio=2.93, p<0.00001, Harrell C-statistic=0.779). CD226 expression on PB NKcs improved immunological stratification in intermediate-risk T1-T4 BC patients, with survival rates of 94.1% and 66.7% for CD226high and CD226low (p<0.05), respectively. ConclusionsImmunological risk stratification will complement BC histopathology to improve risk stratification and guide the selection of personalized treatments. Understanding of the molecular mechanisms of NKc tumor immune surveillance will enable the development of future NKc-based therapies. Patient summaryThis work describes a peripheral blood test that aids in our understanding of the immune defense mechanisms against bladder cancer, is useful for classifying patient risk, and will guide personalized treatments.
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