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Profiling the immune landscape in mucinous ovarian carcinoma

Gynecologic Oncology, ISSN: 0090-8258, Vol: 168, Page: 23-31
2023
  • 13
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 21
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 15
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    13
  • Captures
    21
  • Social Media
    15
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      15
      • Facebook
        15

Article Description

Mucinous ovarian carcinoma (MOC) is a rare histotype of ovarian cancer, with low response rates to standard chemotherapy, and very poor survival for patients diagnosed at advanced stage. There is a limited understanding of the MOC immune landscape, and consequently whether immune checkpoint inhibitors could be considered for a subset of patients. We performed multicolor immunohistochemistry (IHC) and immunofluorescence (IF) on tissue microarrays in a cohort of 126 MOC patients. Cell densities were calculated in the epithelial and stromal components for tumor-associated macrophages (CD68+/PD-L1+, CD68+/PD-L1-), T cells (CD3+/CD8-, CD3+/CD8+), putative T-regulatory cells (Tregs, FOXP3+), B cells (CD20+/CD79A+), plasma cells (CD20-/CD79a+), and PD-L1+ and PD-1+ cells, and compared these values with clinical factors. Univariate and multivariable Cox Proportional Hazards assessed overall survival. Unsupervised k-means clustering identified patient subsets with common patterns of immune cell infiltration. Mean densities of PD1+ cells, PD-L1- macrophages, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and FOXP3+ Tregs were higher in the stroma compared to the epithelium. Tumors from advanced (Stage III/IV) MOC had greater epithelial infiltration of PD-L1- macrophages, and fewer PD-L1+ macrophages compared with Stage I/II cancers ( p = 0.004 and p = 0.014 respectively). Patients with high epithelial density of FOXP3+ cells, CD8+/FOXP3+ cells, or PD-L1- macrophages, had poorer survival, and high epithelial CD79a + plasma cells conferred better survival, all upon univariate analysis only. Clustering showed that most MOC (86%) had an immune depleted (cold) phenotype, with only a small proportion (11/76,14%) considered immune inflamed (hot) based on T cell and PD-L1 infiltrates. In summary, MOCs are mostly immunogenically ‘cold’, suggesting they may have limited response to current immunotherapies.

Bibliographic Details

Meagher, Nicola S; Hamilton, Phineas; Milne, Katy; Thornton, Shelby; Harris, Bronwyn; Weir, Ashley; Alsop, Jennifer; Bisinoto, Christiani; Brenton, James D; Brooks-Wilson, Angela; Chiu, Derek S; Cushing-Haugen, Kara L; Fereday, Sian; Garsed, Dale W; Gayther, Simon A; Gentry-Maharaj, Aleksandra; Gilks, Blake; Jimenez-Linan, Mercedes; Kennedy, Catherine J; Le, Nhu D; Piskorz, Anna M; Riggan, Marjorie J; Shah, Mitul; Singh, Naveena; Talhouk, Aline; Widschwendter, Martin; Bowtell, David D L; Candido Dos Reis, Francisco J; Cook, Linda S; Fortner, Renée T; García, María J; Harris, Holly R; Huntsman, David G; Karnezis, Anthony N; Köbel, Martin; Menon, Usha; Pharoah, Paul D P; Doherty, Jennifer A; Anglesio, Michael S; Pike, Malcolm C; Pearce, Celeste Leigh; Friedlander, Michael L; DeFazio, Anna; Nelson, Brad H; Ramus, Susan J

Elsevier BV

Medicine

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