A114:卵巢癌大网膜脂肪诱导代谢和免疫改变

M. Suarez-Carmona, N. Valous, P. Charoentong, Jakob Nikolas Kather, M. Hampel, B. Lenoir, D. Ferber, S. Schott, S. Kess, I. Zoernig, D. Jaeger, N. Halama
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引用次数: 0

摘要

上皮性卵巢癌(EOC)是一种免疫原性肿瘤实体,多项相关研究表明上皮内肿瘤浸润T淋巴细胞(TIL)密度对患者预后的影响。到目前为止,免疫治疗试验取得了适度的结果,化疗仍然是标准的治疗方法。在这项研究中,我们主要关注侵袭网膜的EOC转移。我们的目的是表征它们的免疫景观,目的是确定这些转移瘤的特定靶向特征,这些转移瘤是最普遍的,与高发病率有关。我们对120例卵巢癌标本进行组织学分析、细胞因子分析或代谢分析。此外,我们建立了EOC组织外植体培养模型,并在评估免疫细胞密度、分布和激活状态之前对整个组织外植体进行药物处理。最后,我们培养了从患者来源的腹水中分离的巨噬细胞,以研究它们对各种治疗的反应。样本被分为网膜转移瘤和原发性肿瘤(基于组织学切片上脂肪的存在)。我们观察到,大网膜转移的特征是巨噬细胞介导的炎症微环境,并被大量低表达激活标志物的til浸润,以及脂肪斑块周围的倾斜定位。这些til表达大量的肿瘤支持CCL5趋化因子。在这些脂肪性肿瘤中也发现巨噬细胞以大液泡的形式储存脂肪酸。在整个组织外植体中使用CCR5抑制剂maraviroc靶向巨噬细胞,有效地恢复了t细胞在组织中的分布,并轻微影响巨噬细胞极化,特别是在含脂肪的肿瘤中。抑制巨噬细胞中脂肪酸的输入更显著地影响了细胞因子景观,特别是在含脂肪的肿瘤中,并建立了一个支持th1的环境,可渗透到t细胞的扩增和活化中。简而言之,大网膜转移的特点是:(a)阴燃炎症反应和高巨噬细胞密度,(b)远离癌细胞的脂肪区周围t细胞积聚增加,(c) t细胞衰竭伴CCL5表达。EOC外植体的治疗表明,浸润大网膜转移瘤的巨噬细胞可以原位再极化,导致TIL扩张和激活。引文格式:Meggy Suarez-Carmona, Nektarios A. Valous, Pornpimol Charoentong, Jakob N. Kather, Mareike Hampel, Benedicte ma. Lenoir, Dyke Ferber, Sarah Schott, Sabine Kess, Inka zoerning, Dirk Jaeger, Niels Halama。卵巢癌大网膜脂肪诱导代谢和免疫改变[摘要]。第四届CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR国际癌症免疫治疗会议:将科学转化为生存;2018年9月30日至10月3日;纽约,纽约。费城(PA): AACR;癌症免疫,2019;7(2增刊):摘要nr A114。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Abstract A114: Omental fat in ovarian cancer induces metabolic and immune alterations
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is an immunogenic tumor entity, as evidenced by multiple correlative studies indicating the impact of intraepithelial tumor-infiltrating T lymphocyte (TIL) density on patient outcome. Immunotherapy trials have generated modest results so far and chemotherapy remains standard of care. In this study, we focus on EOC metastases invading the omentum. Our aim is to characterize their immune landscape with the goal of identifying specific targetable characteristics of these metastases, which are the most prevalent and relate to high morbidity.We used a cohort of 120 ovarian cancer specimens for histologic analysis, cytokine, or metabolic profiling. Furthermore, we developed an EOC tissue explant culture model and treated whole-tissue explants with drugs before assessing immune cell density, distribution, and activation status. Finally, we cultured macrophages isolated from patient-derived ascites to study their response to various treatments.Samples were classified into omental metastases and primary tumors (based on the presence of fat on histologic sections). We observed that omental metastases are characterized by an inflamed microenvironment orchestrated by macrophages and are infiltrated by high amounts of TILs with low expression of activation markers, and a skewed localization around fat patches. These TILs express high amounts of the tumor-supporting CCL5 chemokine. Macrophages storing fatty acids in the form of big vacuoles were found in these fatty tumors as well. Targeting macrophages using the CCR5 inhibitor maraviroc in whole tissue explants effectively restored T-cell distribution across the tissue and slightly affected macrophage polarization specifically in fat-containing tumors. Inhibiting fatty acid import in macrophages more dramatically affected the cytokine landscape, also specifically in fat-containing tumors, and established a Th1-supporting environment permeable to T-cell expansion and activation. In brief, omental metastases are characterized by: (a) a smoldering inflammatory reaction and high macrophage density, (b) increased T-cell accumulation around fatty areas away from cancer cells, and (c) T-cell exhaustion accompanied by CCL5 expression. Treatment of EOC explants revealed that macrophages infiltrating omental metastases can be repolarized in situ, leading to TIL expansion and activation. Citation Format: Meggy Suarez-Carmona, Nektarios A. Valous, Pornpimol Charoentong, Jakob N. Kather, Mareike Hampel, Benedicte M.A. Lenoir, Dyke Ferber, Sarah Schott, Sabine Kess, Inka Zoernig, Dirk Jaeger, Niels Halama. Omental fat in ovarian cancer induces metabolic and immune alterations [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr A114.
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