Systems-level immunomonitoring in children with solid tumors to enable precision medicine

Qi Chen(Karolinska Institutet), Binbin Zhao(Karolinska Institutet), Ziyang Tan(Karolinska Institutet), Gustav Hedberg(Karolinska Institutet), Jun Wang(Karolinska Institutet), Laura González‐Aguilera(Karolinska Institutet), Constantin Habimana Mugabo(Karolinska Institutet), Anette Johnsson(Karolinska Institutet), Erika Negrini(Karolinska Institutet), Laura Piñero Páez(Karolinska Institutet), Lucie Rodriguez(Karolinska Institutet), Anna James(Karolinska Institutet), Yang Chen(Karolinska Institutet), Jaromír Mikeš(Karolinska Institutet), Anna Karin Bernhardsson(Karolinska Institutet), Stefan Markus Reitzner(Karolinska Institutet), Ferdinand von Walden(Karolinska Institutet), Olivia O'Neill(Hammersmith Hospital), Hugo Barcenilla(Karolinska Institutet), Chunlin Wang(Stanford University), Mark M. Davis(Stanford University), Lena-Maria Carlson(Karolinska University Hospital), Niklas Pal(Karolinska University Hospital), Klas Blomgren(Karolinska University Hospital), Dirk Repsilber(Örebro University), Nikolas Herold(Karolinska University Hospital), Tadepally Lakshmikanth(Imperial College London), Per Kogner(Karolinska University Hospital), Linda Ljungblad(Karolinska Institutet), Petter Brodin(Sachs' Children and Youth Hospital)
Cell
January 20, 2025
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer is the leading cause of death from disease in children. Survival depends not only on surgery, cytostatic drugs, and radiation but also on systemic immune responses. Factors influencing these immune responses in children of different ages and tumor types are unknown. Novel immunotherapies can enhance anti-tumor immune responses, but few children have benefited, and markers of effective responses are lacking. Here, we present a systems-level analysis of immune responses in 191 children within a population-based cohort with diverse tumors and reveal that age and tumor type shape immune responses differently. Systemic inflammation and cytotoxic T cell responses correlate with tumor mutation rates and immune cell infiltration. Clonally expanded T cell responses are rarely detected in blood or tumors at diagnosis but are sometimes elicited during treatment. Expanded T cells are similarly regulated in children and adults with more immunogenic cancers. This research aims to facilitate the development of precision immunotherapies for children with cancer.


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