Abstract

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with varied symptoms and pathogenesis, as well as variable prognosis and therapeutic outcomes. Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, one of the tumor microenvironment factors, has been recognized as an important immunological biomarker that reflected the antitumor immune response in breast cancer. We analyzed 207 invasive breast cancer patients who had lumpectomy or mastectomy and have not received any pre-operative treatment. Clinicopathological characteristics, immunohistochemistry characteristics, molecular subtypes classification and stromal TILs evaluation were investigated. Stromal TILs correlated with well-established prognostic markers. Tumor grade showed significantly higher sTILs percentages in high-grade tumors than in low-grade tumors (p<0.001). There was a statistically significant association between intermediate and high levels of sTILs and a high Ki-67 index (p< 0.001). ER/PR negative was significantly related to high sTILs. Mean sTILs score was significantly higher in TNBC (40.1±31.6%) compared to others, statistically significant (p<0.001). In HER2-negative breast cancer, sTILs were significantly associated with histologic grade, ER status, PR status, and Ki67 index. sTILs played an important role, associated with unfavorable factors in breast cancer. Our findings support the use of stromal sTILs to identify a more aggressive phenotype of tumors.

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