Multimodal profiling uncovers tertiary lymphoid structures as a critical determinant of immunotherapy response and prognosis in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Hui Li, Liming Lou, Juan Du, Mei Li, Xianhui Wen, Yuan Zhang, Songran Liu, Zi-Qi Zheng, Xu Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), historically termed 'lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma' due to its rich lymphocyte infiltration, benefit from PD-1 blockade treatment. However, a comprehensive understanding of its tumor microenvironment (TME) remains elusive, hindering the identification of effective biomarkers for immunotherapy. We leveraged multimodal profiling data, including gene expression, immunohistochemistry, and multiplex immunohistochemistry, from three independent cohorts of NPC patients with a total of 327 patients to dissect the TME in NPC. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of TME cell populations in the discovery cohort revealed two novel subtypes with distinct prognosis: 'Immune Inflamed' and 'Immune Deficient'. Intriguingly, the most significant differences between the two subtypes were the abundance of B cells and tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), with a nearly two-fold increase in TLS presence in the Immune Inflamed subtype. The prognostic significance of TLS was confirmed in three independent NPC cohorts, surpassing the prognostic value of individual immune cell subsets. Mechanistically, TLS enhanced anti-tumor immunity by increasing T and B cell receptor repertoire diversity, promoting infiltration of plasma cells, macrophages, and natural killer cells, and consequently increasing antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and antibody-dependent phagocytosis. Finally, TLS status robustly predicted prognosis in a cohort of NPC patients treated with PD-1 blockade, and its prognostic value was consistent across a pan-cancer immunotherapy cohort of 10 tumors and 1158 patients, although with context-specific effects depending on cancer type and immunotherapy modality. In conclusion, this study provides compelling evidence that TLS is a robust indicator of overall immune response within TME and have great potential to guide individualized immunotherapy.
期刊介绍:
Oral Oncology is an international interdisciplinary journal which publishes high quality original research, clinical trials and review articles, editorials, and commentaries relating to the etiopathogenesis, epidemiology, prevention, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and management of patients with neoplasms in the head and neck.
Oral Oncology is of interest to head and neck surgeons, radiation and medical oncologists, maxillo-facial surgeons, oto-rhino-laryngologists, plastic surgeons, pathologists, scientists, oral medical specialists, special care dentists, dental care professionals, general dental practitioners, public health physicians, palliative care physicians, nurses, radiologists, radiographers, dieticians, occupational therapists, speech and language therapists, nutritionists, clinical and health psychologists and counselors, professionals in end of life care, as well as others interested in these fields.