Natural Killer Cell Infiltration in Prostate Cancers Predict Improved Patient Outcomes
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Published:2024-02-28
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ISSN:1365-7852
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Container-title:Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis
Author:
Zorko Nicholas A.ORCID, Makovec AllisonORCID, Elliott Andrew, Kellen Samuel, Lozada John R., Arafa Ali T., Felices Martin, Shackelford Madison, Barata Pedro, Zakharia YousefORCID, Narayan VivekORCID, Stein Mark N., Zarrabi Kevin K., Patniak Akash, Bilen Mehmet A., Radovich Milan, Sledge George, El-Deiry Wafik S., Heath Elisabeth I.ORCID, Hoon Dave S. B., Nabhan Chadi, Miller Jeffrey S., Hwang Justin H., Antonarakis Emmanuel S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Natural killer (NK) cells are non-antigen specific innate immune cells that can be redirected to targets of interest using multiple strategies, although none are currently FDA-approved. We sought to evaluate NK cell infiltration into tumors to develop an improved understanding of which histologies may be most amenable to NK cell-based therapies currently in the developmental pipeline.
Methods
DNA (targeted/whole-exome) and RNA (whole-transcriptome) sequencing was performed from tumors from 45 cancer types (N = 90,916 for all cancers and N = 3365 for prostate cancer) submitted to Caris Life Sciences. NK cell fractions and immune deconvolution were inferred from RNA-seq data using quanTIseq. Real-world overall survival (OS) and treatment status was determined and Kaplan–Meier estimates were calculated. Statistical significance was determined using X2 and Mann–Whitney U tests, with corrections for multiple comparisons where appropriate.
Results
In both a pan-tumor and prostate cancer (PCa) -specific setting, we demonstrated that NK cells represent a substantial proportion of the total cellular infiltrate (median range 2–9% for all tumors). Higher NK cell infiltration was associated with improved OS in 28 of 45 cancer types, including (PCa). NK cell infiltration was negatively correlated with common driver mutations and androgen receptor variants (AR-V7) in primary prostate biopsies, while positively correlated with negative immune regulators. Higher levels of NK cell infiltration were associated with patterns consistent with a compensatory anti-inflammatory response.
Conclusions
Using the largest available dataset to date, we demonstrated that NK cells infiltrate a broad range of tumors, including both primary and metastatic PCa. NK cell infiltration is associated with improved PCa patient outcomes. This study demonstrates that NK cells are capable of trafficking to both primary and metastatic PCa and are a viable option for immunotherapy approaches moving forward. Future development of strategies to enhance tumor-infiltrating NK cell-mediated cytolytic activity and activation while limiting inhibitory pathways will be key.
Funder
U.S. Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Foundation U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health American Society of Hematology Randy Shaver Cancer Research and Community Fund U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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