TIM-3 Dictates Functional Orientation of the Immune Infiltrate in Ovarian Cancer

Jitka Fučíková(Charles University), Jana Raková(Sotio (Czechia)), Michal Hensler(Sotio (Czechia)), Lenka Kašíková(Charles University), Lucie Belicova(Sotio (Czechia)), Kamila Hladíková(Charles University), Iva Truxová(Charles University), Petr Škapa(Charles University), Ján Laco(University Hospital Hradec Králové), Ladislav Pecen(Sotio (Czechia)), Ivan Práznovec(Charles University), Michael J. Halaška(Charles University), Tomáš Brtnický(Charles University), Roman Kodet(Charles University), Anna Fialová(Sotio (Czechia)), Joséphine Pineau(Délégation Paris 5), Alain Gey(Délégation Paris 5), Éric Tartour(Délégation Paris 5), Aleš Ryška(University Hospital Hradec Králové), Lorenzo Galluzzi(Délégation Paris 5), Radek Špíšek(Charles University)
Clinical Cancer Research
May 11, 2019
Cited by 122

Abstract

Abstract Purpose: In multiple oncological settings, expression of the coinhibitory ligand PD-L1 by malignant cells and tumor infiltration by immune cells expressing coinhibitory receptors such as PD-1, CTLA4, LAG-3, or TIM-3 conveys prognostic or predictive information. Conversely, the impact of these features of the tumor microenvironment on disease outcome among high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) patients remains controversial. Experimental Design: We harnessed a retrospective cohort of 80 chemotherapy-naïve HGSC patients to investigate PD-L1 expression and tumor infiltration by CD8+ T cells, CD20+ B cells, DC-LAMP+ dendritic cells as well as by PD-1+, CTLA4+, LAG-3+, and TIM-3+ cells in relation with prognosis and function orientation of the tumor microenvironment. IHC data were complemented with transcriptomic and functional studies on a second prospective cohort of freshly resected HGSC samples. In silico analysis of publicly available RNA expression data from 308 HGSC samples was used as a confirmatory approach. Results: High levels of PD-L1 and high densities of PD-1+ cells in the microenvironment of HGSCs were strongly associated with an immune contexture characterized by a robust TH1 polarization and cytotoxic orientation that enabled superior clinical benefits. Moreover, PD-1+TIM-3+CD8+ T cells presented all features of functional exhaustion and correlated with poor disease outcome. However, although PD-L1 levels and tumor infiltration by TIM-3+ cells improved patient stratification based on the intratumoral abundance of CD8+ T cells, the amount of PD-1+ cells failed to do so. Conclusions: Our data indicate that PD-L1 and TIM-3 constitute prognostically relevant biomarkers of active and suppressed immune responses against HGSC, respectively.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis