Impacts of tumor microenvironment during neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

Author:

Sugawara Kotaro1ORCID,Fukuda Takashi1,Murakami Chiaki23,Oka Daiji1,Yoshii Takako4,Amori Gulanbar256,Ishibashi Kumiko2,Kobayashi Yasuhito2,Hara Hiroki4,Kanda Hiroaki2,Motoi Noriko27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Gastroenterological Surgery Saitama Cancer Center Saitama Japan

2. Department of Pathology Saitama Cancer Center Saitama Japan

3. Department of Pathology Saitama Medical Center, Saitama Medical University Saitama Japan

4. Department of Gastroenterology Saitama Cancer Center Saitama Japan

5. Division of Pathology Cancer Institute, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research Tokyo Japan

6. Department of Pathology Cancer Institute Hospital of JFCR, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research Tokyo Japan

7. Center for Cancer Genomic Medicine Saitama Cancer Center Saitama Japan

Abstract

AbstractWith the advent of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), a better understanding of tumor microenvironment (TME) is becoming crucial in managing esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) patients. We investigated the survival impact of TME status and changes in patients with ESCC who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by surgery (n = 264). We examined immunohistochemical status (CD4+, CD8+, CD20+, Foxp3+, HLA class‐1+, CD204+, and programmed death ligand‐1 [PD‐L1+]) on 264 pre‐NAC and 204 paired post‐NAC specimens. Patients were classified by their pre‐ and post‐NAC immune cell status and their changes following NAC. Our findings showed that pre‐NAC TME status was not significantly associated with survival outcomes. In contrast, post‐NAC TME status, such as low level of T cells, CD4+ T cells, and high PD‐L1 combined positive score (CPS), were significantly associated with poor overall survival (OS). Notably, TME changes through NAC exerted significant survival impacts; patients with consistently low levels of T cells, low levels of CD4+ T cells, or high levels of PD‐L1 (CPS) had very poor OS (3‐year OS: 35.5%, 40.2%, and 33.3%, respectively). Tumor microenvironment changes of consistently low T cells, low CD4+ T cells, and high PD‐L1 were independent predictors of poor OS in multivariate Cox hazards analyses, while factors indicating post‐NAC status (T cells, CD4+, and PD‐L1 [CPS]) alone were not. Therefore, we suggest that the consistently low T/high PD‐L1 group could benefit from additional therapies, such as ICIs, and the importance of stratification by the TME, which has recently been recognized.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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