Tumor-associated lymphocytes as an independent predictor of response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer

C Denkert, S Loibl, A Noske, M Roller… - Journal of clinical …, 2010 - ascopubs.org
C Denkert, S Loibl, A Noske, M Roller, BM Müller, M Komor, J Budczies, S Darb-Esfahani…
Journal of clinical oncology, 2010ascopubs.org
Purpose Preclinical data suggest a contribution of the immune system to chemotherapy
response. In this study, we investigated the prespecified hypothesis that the presence of a
lymphocytic infiltrate in cancer tissue predicts the response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Methods We investigated intratumoral and stromal lymphocytes in a total of 1,058
pretherapeutic breast cancer core biopsies from two neoadjuvant anthracycline/taxane-
based studies (GeparDuo, n= 218, training cohort; and GeparTrio, n= 840, validation cohort) …
Purpose
Preclinical data suggest a contribution of the immune system to chemotherapy response. In this study, we investigated the prespecified hypothesis that the presence of a lymphocytic infiltrate in cancer tissue predicts the response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Methods
We investigated intratumoral and stromal lymphocytes in a total of 1,058 pretherapeutic breast cancer core biopsies from two neoadjuvant anthracycline/taxane-based studies (GeparDuo, n = 218, training cohort; and GeparTrio, n = 840, validation cohort). Molecular parameters of lymphocyte recruitment and activation were evaluated by kinetic polymerase chain reaction in 134 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor samples.
Results
In a multivariate regression analysis including all known predictive clinicopathologic factors, the percentage of intratumoral lymphocytes was a significant independent parameter for pathologic complete response (pCR) in both cohorts (training cohort: P = .012; validation cohort: P = .001). Lymphocyte-predominant breast cancer responded, with pCR rates of 42% (training cohort) and 40% (validation cohort). In contrast, those tumors without any infiltrating lymphocytes had pCR rates of 3% (training cohort) and 7% (validation cohort). The expression of inflammatory marker genes and proteins was linked to the histopathologic infiltrate, and logistic regression showed a significant association of the T-cell–related markers CD3D and CXCL9 with pCR.
Conclusion
The presence of tumor-associated lymphocytes in breast cancer is a new independent predictor of response to anthracycline/taxane neoadjuvant chemotherapy and provides useful information for oncologists to identify a subgroup of patients with a high benefit from this type of chemotherapy.
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