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The intraprostatic immune environment after stereotactic body radiotherapy is dominated by myeloid cells.

Authors :
Nickols, Nicholas G
Nickols, Nicholas G
Ganapathy, Ekambaram
Nguyen, Christine
Kane, Nathanael
Lin, Lin
Diaz-Perez, Silvia
Nazarian, Ramin
Mathis, Colleen
Felix, Care
Basehart, Vince
Zomorodian, Nazy
Kwak, Jae
Kishan, Amar U
King, Christopher R
Kupelian, Patrick A
Rettig, Matthew B
Steinberg, Michael L
Cao, Minsong
Knudsen, Beatrice S
Chu, Fang-I
Romero, Tahmineh
Elashoff, David
Reiter, Robert E
Schaue, Dörthe
Nickols, Nicholas G
Nickols, Nicholas G
Ganapathy, Ekambaram
Nguyen, Christine
Kane, Nathanael
Lin, Lin
Diaz-Perez, Silvia
Nazarian, Ramin
Mathis, Colleen
Felix, Care
Basehart, Vince
Zomorodian, Nazy
Kwak, Jae
Kishan, Amar U
King, Christopher R
Kupelian, Patrick A
Rettig, Matthew B
Steinberg, Michael L
Cao, Minsong
Knudsen, Beatrice S
Chu, Fang-I
Romero, Tahmineh
Elashoff, David
Reiter, Robert E
Schaue, Dörthe
Source :
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases; vol 24, iss 1, 135-139; 1365-7852
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundHundreds of ongoing clinical trials combine radiation therapy, mostly delivered as stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), with immune checkpoint blockade. However, our understanding of the effect of radiotherapy on the intratumoral immune balance is inadequate, hindering the optimal design of trials that combine radiation therapy with immunotherapy. Our objective was to characterize the intratumoral immune balance of the malignant prostate after SBRT in patients.MethodsSixteen patients with high-risk, non-metastatic prostate cancer at comparable Gleason Grade disease underwent radical prostatectomy with (n = 9) or without (n = 7) neoadjuvant SBRT delivered in three fractions of 8 Gy over 5 days completed 2 weeks before surgery. Freshly resected prostate specimens were processed to obtain single-cell suspensions, and immune-phenotyped for major lymphoid and myeloid cell subsets by staining with two separate 14-antibody panels and multicolor flow cytometry analysis.ResultsMalignant prostates 2 weeks after SBRT had an immune infiltrate dominated by myeloid cells, whereas malignant prostates without preoperative treatment were more lymphoid-biased (myeloid CD45+ cells 48.4 ± 19.7% vs. 25.4 ± 7.0%; adjusted p-value = 0.11; and CD45+ lymphocytes 51.6 ± 19.7% vs. 74.5 ± 7.0%; p = 0.11; CD3+ T cells 35.2 ± 23.8% vs. 60.9 ± 9.7%; p = 0.12; mean ± SD).ConclusionSBRT drives a significant lymphoid to myeloid shift in the prostate-tumor immune infiltrate. This may be of interest when combining SBRT with immunotherapies, particularly in prostate cancer.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases; vol 24, iss 1, 135-139; 1365-7852
Notes :
application/pdf, Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases vol 24, iss 1, 135-139 1365-7852
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287332851
Document Type :
Electronic Resource