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Activated tissue resident memory T-cells (CD8+CD103+CD39+) uniquely predict survival in left sided "immune-hot" colorectal cancers.

Authors :
Talhouni, Shahd
Fadhil, Wakkas
Mongan, Nigel P.
Field, Lara
Hunter, Kelly
Makhsous, Sogand
Maciel-Guerra, Alexandre
Kaur, Nayandeep
Nestarenkaite, Ausrine
Laurinavicius, Arvydas
Willcox, Benjamin E.
Dottorini, Tania
Spendlove, Ian
Jackson, Andrew M.
Ilyas, Mohammad
Ramage, Judith M.
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology; 2023, p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Introduction: Characterization of the tumour immune infiltrate (notably CD8+ T-cells) has strong predictive survival value for cancer patients. Quantification of CD8 T-cells alone cannot determine antigenic experience, as not all infiltrating T-cells recognize tumour antigens. Activated tumour-specific tissue resident memory CD8 T-cells (TRM) can be defined by the co-express of CD103, CD39 and CD8. We investigated the hypothesis that the abundance and localization of TRM provides a higher-resolution route to patient stratification. Methods: A comprehensive series of 1000 colorectal cancer (CRC) were arrayed on a tissue microarray, with representative cores from three tumour locations and the adjacent normal mucosa. Using multiplex immunohistochemistry we quantified and determined the localization of TRM. Results: Across all patients, activated TRM were an independent predictor of survival, and superior to CD8 alone. Patients with the best survival had immune-hot tumours heavily infiltrated throughout with activated TRM. Interestingly, differences between right- and left-sided tumours were apparent. In left-sided CRC, only the presence of activated TRM (and not CD8 alone) was prognostically significant. Patients with low numbers of activated TRM cells had a poor prognosis even with high CD8 T-cell infiltration. In contrast, in right-sided CRC, high CD8 T-cell infiltration with low numbers of activated TRM was a good prognosis. Conclusion: The presence of high intra-tumoural CD8 T-cells alone is not a predictor of survival in left-sided CRC and potentially risks under treatment of patients. Measuring both high tumour-associated TRM and total CD8 T-cells in left-sided disease has the potential to minimize current under-treatment of patients. The challenge will be to design immunotherapies, for left-sided CRC patients with high CD8 T-cells and low activate TRM, that result in effective immune responses and thereby improve patient survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16643224
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164024328
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1057292