6533b828fe1ef96bd1289136
RESEARCH PRODUCT
High numbers of circulating CD57+ NK cells associate with resistance to HER2-specific therapeutic antibodies in HER2+ primary breast cancer.
Ana RoviraManuela MoraruGemma HerediaLaia SerranoLaura SoriaM. I. MartínezCarlos VilchesAna LluchSandra Pérez-buiraLaura ComermaSara Santana-hernándezBegoña BermejoIgnasi TusquetsOriol ArpíPilar ErolesMariona CaboAndrea VeraMarcel Costa-garcíaMaria Martinez-garciaJoan AlbanellSonia ServitjaMiguel López-botetFederico RojoAura Muntasellsubject
0301 basic medicineCancer Researchmedicine.diagnostic_testbiologybusiness.industryImmunologymedicine.diseaseCXCR303 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineImmunophenotypingBreast cancer030220 oncology & carcinogenesisBiopsymedicineCancer researchbiology.proteinNeoplasmAntibodyskin and connective tissue diseasesReceptorbusinessHoming (hematopoietic)description
Abstract Natural killer (NK) cells can orchestrate effective antitumor immunity. The presence of tumor-infiltrating NK cells in diagnostic biopsies predicts pathologic complete response (pCR) to HER2-specific therapeutic antibodies in patients with primary breast cancer. Here, we analyzed whether diversity in circulating NK cells might influence tumor infiltration and HER2-specific therapeutic antibody efficacy. We found that numbers of circulating CD57+ NK cells inversely correlated with pCR to HER2-specific antibody treatment in patients with primary breast cancer independently of age, traditional clinicopathologic factors, and CD16A 158F/V genotype. This association was uncoupled from the expression of other NK-cell receptors, the presence of adaptive NK cells, or changes in major T-cell subsets, reminiscent of cytomegalovirus-induced immunomodulation. NK-cell activation against trastuzumab-coated HER2+ breast cancer cells was comparable in patients with high and low proportions of CD57+ NK cells. However, circulating CD57+ NK cells displayed decreased CXCR3 expression and CD16A-induced IL2-dependent proliferation in vitro. Presence of CD57+ NK cells was reduced in breast tumor–associated infiltrates as compared with paired peripheral blood samples, suggesting deficient homing, proliferation, and/or survival of NK cells in the tumor niche. Indeed, numbers of circulating CD57+ were inversely related to tumor-infiltrating NK-cell numbers. Our data reveal that NK-cell differentiation influences their antitumor potential and that CD57+ NK cells may be a biomarker useful for tailoring HER2 antibody–based therapeutic strategies in breast cancer.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-08-01 |