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PD‐L1 and PD‐L2 expression status in relation to chemotherapy in primary and metastatic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

Authors :
Kazuo Okadome
Noriko Yasuda-Yoshihara
Taisuke Yagi
Tasuku Toihata
Takatsugu Ishimoto
Masayuki Watanabe
Yoshifumi Baba
Daichi Nomoto
Hiroshi Sawayama
Naoya Yoshida
Katsuhiro Ogawa
Masaaki Iwatsuki
Shiro Iwagami
Yuji Miyamoto
Yoshihiro Komohara
Hideo Baba
Source :
Cancer Science. 113:399-410
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Immune checkpoint inhibitors have shown efficacy in various cancers. Although programmed death ligand 1/2 (PD-L1/L2) expressions have been demonstrated as predictive biomarkers of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors and prognostic markers, whether PD-L1/L2 expression is altered in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma during the therapeutic course is unclear. Whether PD-L1/L2 expression in metastatic or recurrent lesions is consistent with that in primary tumors is also unknown. This study included 561 surgically resected esophageal squamous cell carcinomas and PD-L1/L2 expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. We investigated the influence of chemotherapeutic drugs (cisplatin and fluorouracil) on PD-L1/L2 expression and PD-L1/L2-related pathways in vitro. We also examined PD-L1/L2 expression in 18 surgically resected lymph node metastases and 10 recurrent lesions compared with primary lesions. The positive rate of PD-L1 was significantly higher in patients with preoperative chemotherapy than in those without preoperative therapy. The positive rate of PD-L2 expression showed no significant difference between patient groups. Cisplatin increased PD-L1 expression in cancer cell lines in vitro, but decreased PD-L2 in some cell lines. The effects of cisplatin on phosphorylated signal transducer and activator of transcription 1/3 (pSTAT1/3) also differed depending on cell lines. Fluorouracil increased PD-L1 and PD-L2 expression. PD-L1/L2 expression in lymph node metastases and recurrent lesions did not always match expression in primary lesions. PD-L1/L2 expression may be altered by preoperative chemotherapy, and PD-L1 /L2 expression in primary lesions does not always match that of metastatic/recurrent lesions. Thus, one-time evaluation is not sufficient to evaluate PD-L1/L2 expression as a biomarker in esophageal cancer.

Details

ISSN :
13497006 and 13479032
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4756d8c9e97f81318595d3894f6d8675