We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Immune Exclusion Is Frequent in Small-Cell Carcinoma of the Bladder.
- Authors
Mandelkow, Tim; Blessin, Niclas C.; Lueerss, Eva; Pott, Laura; Simon, Ronald; Li, Wenchao; Wellge, Björn; Debatin, Nicolaus F.; Höflmayer, Doris; Izbicki, Jakob R.; Büscheck, Franziska; Luebke, Andreas M.; Wittmer, Corinna; Jacobsen, Frank; Lutz, Florian; Burandt, Eike; Steurer, Stefan; Sauter, Guido; Tsourlakis, Maria Christina; Wilczak, Waldemar
- Abstract
Small-cell cancer of the urinary bladder is a rare but highly aggressive disease. It is currently unclear whether immune checkpoint therapies that have been approved for urothelial carcinomas will also be efficient in small-cell carcinomas. In this study, we analyzed potential predictors of response including PD-L1 expression and the quantity and location of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in 12 small-cell and 69 "classical" urothelial cancers by immunohistochemistry. The analysis revealed that small-cell carcinomas were characterized by the virtual absence of PD-L1 expression and an "immune-excluded" phenotype with only a few TILs in the center of the tumor (CT). In small-cell carcinomas, the average immune cell density in the CT (CD3: 159±206, CD8: 87±169 cells/mm2) was more than 3 times lower than that in the urothelial carcinomas (CD3: 625±800, p<0.001; CD8: 362±626 cells/mm2, p=0.004) while there was no significant difference in the immune cell density at the invasive margin (IM) (small-cell carcinomas CD3: 899±733, CD8: 404±433 cells/mm2; urothelial carcinomas CD3: 1167±1206, p=0.31; CD8: 582±864 cells/mm2, p=0.27). Positive PD-L1 staining was found in 39% of urothelial cancers, but in only 8% of small-cell bladder cancer cases (p=0.04). Concordant with these data, a sharp decrease of PD-L1 positivity from >80% to 0% positive cells and of TILS in the CT from 466-1063 CD3-positive cells/mm2 to 50-109 CD3-positive cells/mm2 was observed in two cancers with clear-cut progression from "classical" urothelial to small-cell carcinoma. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that small-cell bladder cancer commonly exhibits an immune-excluded phenotype.
- Subjects
PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors; CARCINOMA; BLADDER cancer; BLADDER; CANCER invasiveness
- Publication
Disease Markers, 2019, p1
- ISSN
0278-0240
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1155/2019/2532518