Spatially mapping the tumour immune microenvironments of non-small cell lung cancer

Lysanne Desharnais(McGill University Health Centre), Mark Sorin(McGill University Health Centre), Morteza Rezanejad(McGill University Health Centre), Bridget Liu(McGill University Health Centre), Elham Karimi(McGill University Health Centre), Aline Atallah(McGill University Health Centre), Anikka Swaby(McGill University Health Centre), Miranda W. Yu(McGill University Health Centre), Samuel Doré(McGill University Health Centre), Saskia Hartner(McGill University Health Centre), Benoit Fiset(McGill University Health Centre), Yuhong Wei(McGill University Health Centre), Baharak Kadang(McGill University), Roni Rayes(McGill University Health Centre), Philippe Joubert(Université Laval), Sophie Camilleri‐Broët(McGill University), Pierre Fiset(McGill University), Daniela F. Quail(McGill University Health Centre), Jonathan Spicer(McGill University Health Centre), Logan A. Walsh(McGill University Health Centre)
Nature Communications
February 4, 2025
Cited by 35Open Access
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Abstract

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. An enhanced understanding of the immune microenvironments within these tumours may foster more precise and efficient treatment, particularly for immune-targeted therapies. The spatial architectural differences between lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) are relatively unexplored. Here, we applied imaging mass cytometry to a balanced cohort of LUAD and LUSC patients, matched for clinical factors such as age, sex, and smoking history, to analyze 204 histopathology images of tumours from 102 individuals with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). By analyzing interactions and broader cellular networks, we interrogate the tumour microenvironment to understand how immune cells are spatially organized in clinically matched adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma subsets. This spatial analysis revealed distinct patterns of immune cell aggregation, particularly among macrophage populations, that correlated with patient prognosis differentially in adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, suggesting potential new strategies for therapeutic intervention. Our findings underscore the importance of analyzing NSCLC histological subtypes separately when investigating the spatial immune landscape, as microenvironmental characteristics and cellular interactions differed by subtype. Recognizing these distinctions is essential for designing precision therapies tailored to each subtype’s unique immune architecture, ultimately enhancing patient outcomes. The spatial architecture of the lung cancer microenvironment could influence the survival outlook and therapeutic options of patients. Here the authors find distinct patterns and composition of immune cells when comparing lung adenocarcinomas and lung squamous cell carcinomas, paving way for precision immune therapy according to histological subtype.


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