Abstract

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and the immune infiltration of tumors are closely related to clinical outcomes. This study aimed to verify the influence of stromal lymphocyte infiltration and the immune context of tumor microenvironment on the hematogenous spread and prognosis of 282 chemotherapy naïve primary BC patients. To detect the presence of mesenchymal CTCs, RNA extracted from CD45-depleted peripheral blood was interrogated for the expression of mesenchymal gene transcripts. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were detected in the stromal areas by immunohistochemistry, using CD3, CD8, and CD45RO antibodies. The concentrations of 51 plasma cytokines were measured by multiplex bead arrays. TILs infiltration in mesenchymal CTC-positive patients significantly decreased their progression-free survival (HR = 4.88, 95% CI 2.30–10.37, p < 0.001 for CD3high; HR = 6.17, 95% CI 2.75–13.80, p < 0.001 for CD8high; HR = 6.93, 95% CI 2.86–16.81, p < 0.001 for CD45ROhigh). Moreover, the combination of elevated plasma concentrations of transforming growth factor beta-3 (cut-off 662 pg/mL), decreased monocyte chemotactic protein-3 (cut-off 52.5 pg/mL) and interleukin-15 (cut-off 17.1 pg/mL) significantly increased the risk of disease recurrence (HR = 4.838, 95% CI 2.048–11.427, p < 0.001). Our results suggest a strong impact of the immune tumor microenvironment on BC progression, especially through influencing the dissemination and survival of more aggressive, mesenchymal CTC subtypes.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer (BC) represents a heterogeneous disease that develops in a very complex microenvironment composed of several types of benign cells, some of which are involved in the immunogenicity of BC [1]

  • BC has not been considered as an “immunogenic“ malignancy, the occurrence of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) has been consistently documented, with an impact on prognosis [2]

  • We evaluated the expression of stromal TILs, T lymphocytes (CD3), cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CD8), and memory T lymphocytes (CD45RO) in breast tumor tissues and we correlated their expression in the stromal areas of tumors with the presence of Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in peripheral blood of patients

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer (BC) represents a heterogeneous disease that develops in a very complex microenvironment composed of several types of benign cells, some of which are involved in the immunogenicity of BC [1]. BC has not been considered as an “immunogenic“ malignancy, the occurrence of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) has been consistently documented, with an impact on prognosis [2]. TILs subpopulations are differently expressed in BC tumors, but their main component seems to be represented by CD3+ T-cells [3]. Higher levels of tumor-infiltrating effector T-cells are associated with better clinical outcomes in selected BC subtypes [4,5,6,7]. BC patients with elevated TIL amounts had a significantly increased pathological complete response rate upon neoadjuvant chemotherapy compared to patients with poorly infiltrated tumors [7,8]

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