1. Clinical Meaning of Stromal Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (sTIL) in Early Luminal B Breast Cancer.
- Author
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García-Torralba, Esmeralda, Pérez Ramos, Miguel, Ivars Rubio, Alejandra, Navarro-Manzano, Esther, Blaya Boluda, Noel, de la Morena Barrio, Pilar, García-Garre, Elisa, Martínez Díaz, Francisco, Chaves-Benito, Asunción, García-Martínez, Elena, and Ayala de la Peña, Francisco
- Subjects
BREAST cancer prognosis ,ADJUVANT chemotherapy ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ONCOGENES ,LYMPHOCYTES ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,PREDICTION models ,ODDS ratio ,BREAST tumors ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Simple Summary: Stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (sTIL) are a validated predictive and prognostic biomarker in non-luminal breast cancer. Our aim was to evaluate their clinical relevance in luminal (hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative) early breast cancer. Our results show that, although sTIL are associated with a better response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, they are also associated with worse biological features (proliferation, higher stage) and poorer prognosis in luminal B breast cancer. TIL might improve prognostic stratification and contribute to therapeutic decision-making in the early high-risk setting of luminal B breast cancer. Luminal breast cancer (BC) is associated with less immune activation, and the significance of stromal lymphocytic infiltration (sTIL) is more uncertain than in other BC subtypes. The aim of this study was to investigate the predictive and prognostic value of sTIL in early luminal BC. The study was performed with an observational design in a prospective cohort of 345 patients with predominantly high-risk luminal (hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative) BC and with luminal B features (n = 286), in which the presence of sTIL was analyzed with validated methods. Median sTIL infiltration was 5% (Q1–Q3 range (IQR), 0–10). We found that sTIL were associated with characteristics of higher biological and clinical aggressiveness (tumor and lymph node proliferation and stage, among others) and that the percentage of sTIL was predictive of pathologic complete response in patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (OR: 1.05, 95%CI 1.02–1.09, p < 0.001). The inclusion of sTIL (any level of lymphocytic infiltration: sTIL > 0%) in Cox regression multivariable prognostic models was associated with a shorter relapse-free interval (HR: 4.85, 95%CI 1.33–17.65, p = 0.016) and significantly improved its performance. The prognostic impact of sTIL was independent of other clinical and pathological variables and was mainly driven by its relevance in luminal B BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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