4.6 Article

A comprehensive profiling of the immune microenvironment of breast cancer brain metastases

Journal

NEURO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages 2146-2158

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/neuonc/noac136

Keywords

brain metastases; breast cancer; immune biomarkers; immune microenvironment; multiplex immunofluorescence

Funding

  1. Conquer Cancer Foundation of ASCO/Shanken Family Foundation Young Investigator Award
  2. Fondazione AIRC under 5 per mille [2019-ID.22759]
  3. Veneto Region
  4. Italian Health Ministry [NET-2016-02363853, RCR-201923669115, NET-2016-02361632]
  5. Fondazione AIRC-IG [2135]
  6. Italian Ministry of Health
  7. Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS
  8. University of Padova

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This study described the main features of the immune microenvironment in breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM) and evaluated its prognostic impact. The results showed subtype-related differences in BCBM immune microenvironment and identified two potential therapeutic targets for future exploration in clinical trials.
Background Despite potential clinical implications, the complexity of breast cancer (BC) brain metastases (BM) immune microenvironment is poorly understood. Through multiplex immunofluorescence, we here describe the main features of BCBM immune microenvironment (density and spatial distribution) and evaluate its prognostic impact. Methods Sixty BCBM from patients undergoing neurosurgery at three institutions (2003-2018) were comprehensively assessed using two multiplex immunofluorescence panels (CD4, CD8, Granzyme B, FoxP3, CD68, pan-cytokeratin, DAPI; CD3, PD-1, PD-L1, LAG-3, TIM-3, CD163, pan-cytokeratin, DAPI). The prognostic impact of immune subpopulations and cell-to-cell spatial interactions was evaluated. Results Subtype-related differences in BCBM immune microenvironment and its prognostic impact were observed. While in HR-/HER2- BM and HER2+ BM, higher densities of intra-tumoral CD8+ lymphocytes were associated with significantly longer OS (HR 0.16 and 0.20, respectively), in HR+/HER2- BCBMs a higher CD4+FoxP3+/CD8+ cell ratio in the stroma was associated with worse OS (HR 5.4). Moreover, a higher density of intra-tumoral CD163+ M2-polarized microglia/macrophages in BCBMs was significantly associated with worse OS in HR-/HER2- and HR+/HER2- BCBMs (HR 6.56 and 4.68, respectively), but not in HER2+ BCBMs. In HER2+ BCBMs, multiplex immunofluorescence highlighted a negative prognostic role of PD-1/PD-L1 interaction: patients with a higher percentage of PD-L1+ cells spatially interacting with (within a 20 mu m radius) PD-1+ cells presented a significantly worse OS (HR 4.60). Conclusions Our results highlight subtype-related differences in BCBM immune microenvironment and identify two potential therapeutic targets, M2 microglia/macrophage polarization in HER2- and PD-1/PD-L1 interaction in HER2+ BCBMs, which warrant future exploration in clinical trials.

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