Abstract

AimsCardiac myxomas are rare tumors of incompletely elucidated pathogenesis. The aim of this study is to explore the possible presence of a senescence phenotype in cardiac myxomas, associated with an inflammatory and vasculogenic tumor microenvironment. Methods and resultsThis is a retrospective study of 29 cardiac myxomas with immunohistochemical detection of various inflammatory, vascular, and senescence markers. We show that all myxomas contain tumor cells in senescence overexpressing p16, and a fraction of senescent endothelial cells. Macrophages are the principal inflammatory cell population, followed by cytotoxic T cells, with fewer plasma cells, mastocytes, and B lymphocytes. These populations are found in different intratumoral localizations. Larger tumor volume is associated with a lower percentage of myxoid matrix, higher cellularity, higher macrophage, and lower number of mast cells as well as higher PD-L1 expression by inflammatory cells. Higher vascular density is associated with higher percentage of B cells, a lower number of macrophages and higher number of mastocytes, and lower PD-L1 expression by inflammatory cells. Tumors with higher vascular density and higher cellularity show higher amounts of p16 senescent endothelial cells. ConclusionsMyxoma tumor cells are in senescence and reside inside a tumor microenvironment with a distinct inflammatory profile rich in macrophages and cytotoxic T cells, and a rich vasculature, probably attributed to a senescence-associated secretory phenotype.

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