Abstract

Histological regression and tumour infiltrating lymphocytes represent an early sign of activation of the immune system against primary melanoma. The first phenomenon has been especially discussed in the literature because of its prognostic role, but no clear agreement on its evaluation has been reached. Immunotherapy of advanced stage melanoma has recently shown promising results; an improved understanding of the initial interplay between melanoma cells and the immune system would potentially help tailor treatment for patients. Seventy consecutive melanomas with regression were analysed to identify a prognostic cut-off value of regression extension. Then, we compared the immune infiltrate between regressed and not regressed areas of these regressed melanomas, assessing CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20, CD123, PD1 and FOXP3/CD25 expression. The immune infiltrate of these cases was further compared with 28 control melanomas without regression. A regression extension of 10% represented a reliable cut-off to distinguish two different risk categories in regressed melanomas. Regressed areas were less infiltrated by CD4/CD25, FOXP3/CD4 or PD1/CD4 compared to not regressed areas of each sample. These lymphocyte subsets are associated with anergy and hamper the immune CD8+ response towards the cancer cells. Moreover, the relevance of these findings was further supported by the observation that not regressed controls were significantly more infiltrated by these anergic immune cell subsets compared to the regressed cases. These results help understand the real meaning of regression in melanoma. Moreover, the association here identified between specific immunomodulatory immune cell subsets and regression could help in developing new therapeutic strategies.

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