The three-tier immunophenotype (desert, excluded, and inflamed) and the four-tier immunophenotype (cold, immunosuppressed, excluded, and hot) have been linked to prognosis and immunotherapy response. This study aims to evaluate whether immunophenotypes of clear cell renal cell carcinoma, identified on hematoxylin and eosin-stained slides, correlate with gene expression signatures related to cancer immunity, and clinical outcomes. We evaluated tumor-associated immune cells (TAICs) status using three methodologies: three-tier immunophenotype based on the location of TAICs, four-tier immunophenotype considering both the location and degree of TAICs and inflammation score focusing only on the degree of TAICs, using a localized clear cell renal cell carcinoma cohort (n = 436) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA)-KIRC cohort (n = 162). We evaluated the association of the TAICs status assessed by three methodologies with CD8 and PD-L1 immunohistochemistry and immune gene expression signatures by TCGA RNA-sequencing data. All three methodologies correlated with immunohistochemical and immune gene expression signatures. The inflammation score and the four-tier immunophenotype showed similarly higher accuracy in predicting recurrence-free survival and overall survival compared to the three-tier immunophenotype. In conclusion, a simple histologic assessment of TIACs may predict clinical outcomes and immunotherapy responses.
Background
Extranodal extension (ENE) is an adverse prognostic factor for oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), and patients with OSCC along with ENE require neck dissection. In this study, we developed a novel ENE histology-based pathological predictor using MMP14 expression patterns in small biopsy specimens.
Methods
A total of 71 surgically resected tissue, 64 dissected lymph node (LN), and 46 biopsy specimens were collected from 71 patients with OSCC. Immunohistochemical analyses of total MMP14 expression in the tumour nest and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) were performed using the MMP14 co-scoring system (high- or low-risk). The association analysis of MMP14 expression in metastatic LNs was performed with respect to the presence and absence of ENE. Clinicopathological analyses and multivariate examinations were performed to assess the risks of metastasis and ENE presence. The predictive value of ENE and the impact of ENE and MMP14 expression on 5-year overall survival were examined.
Results
High-risk MMP14 expression was detected in metastatic LN specimens with ENE. MMP14 expression in tumour nests and CAFs and its overexpression at the tumour–stromal interface significantly correlated with the presence of ENE. The MMP14 co-scoring system was an independent risk predictor for ENE, with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of over 80% in biopsy samples; patients with a high risk in the MMP14 co-scoring system had significantly worse prognoses in both resections and biopsies.
Conclusion
The MMP14 co-scoring system accurately predicted ENE presence and poor prognosis via immunohistochemical evaluation of small biopsies. This system is a simple, accurate, and inexpensive immunohistochemical approach that can be used in routine pathological diagnosis for effective treatment planning.
Degenerated tissues are frequently observed in malignant tumors, but are not analyzed. We investigated whether nuclear streaming and necrosis samples could be used for genetic analysis to expand the sample pool. A total of 81 samples were extracted from small cell carcinoma and lymphoma FFPE tissue blocks and classified into three histological cohorts: 33 materials with well-preserved tumor morphology, 31 nuclear streaming samples, and 17 necrosis samples. DNA and RNA integrity numbers, percentage of RNA fragments with >200 nucleotides, and next-generation sequencing quality metrics were compared among the cohorts. DNA quality did not significantly differ between nuclear streaming materials and materials with well-preserved morphology, whereas that of the necrosis samples was inferior. RNA quality decreased in the following order: materials with well-preserved morphology > nuclear streaming > necrosis. The sequencing metrics did not differ significantly between the nuclear streaming samples and materials with well-preserved morphology, and reliable variants were detected. The necrosis samples extracted from resections exhibited sequencing failure and showed significantly fewer on-target aligned reads and variants. However, variant allele frequency did not differ among the cohorts. We revelated that DNA in nuclear streaming samples, especially within biopsies, could be used for genetic analysis. Moreover, degenerated non-tumor cells should be counted when evaluating tumor content to avoid misinterpreting the variant allele frequency.
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