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RESEARCH PRODUCT

NK Cell Infiltrates and HLA Class I Expression in Primary HER2+ Breast Cancer Predict and Uncouple Pathological Response and Disease-free Survival

Federico RojoSilvia MenendezAna LluchDavid TamboreroAura MuntasellAbel Gonzalez-perezMaria Martinez-garciaMarcel Costa-garcíaIvonne VazquezAna RoviraCarlota Rubio-perezSonia ServitjaMiguel López-botetJoan AlbanellMariona Cabo

subject

0301 basic medicineOncologyCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtybiologybusiness.industryHuman leukocyte antigenmedicine.diseaseGene expression profiling03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineBreast cancerImmune systemOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisInternal medicineCohortmedicinebiology.proteinBiomarker (medicine)ImmunohistochemistryAntibodybusiness

description

Abstract Purpose: We investigated the value of tumor-infiltrating NK (TI-NK) cells and HLA class I tumor expression as biomarkers of response to neoadjuvant anti-HER2 antibody–based treatment in breast cancer. Experimental Design: TI-NK cells and HLA-I were determined by IHC in pretreatment tumor biopsies from two cohorts of patients with HER2-positive breast cancer [discovery cohort (n = 42) and validation cohort (n = 71)]. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) were scored according to international guidelines. Biomarker association with pathologic complete response (pCR) and disease-free survival (DFS) was adjusted for prognostic factors. Gene set variation analysis was used for determining immune cell populations concomitant to NK-cell enrichment in HER2-positive tumors from the Cancer Genome Atlas (n = 190). Results: TI-NK cells were significantly associated with pCR in the discovery cohort as well as in the validation cohort (P < 0.0001), independently of clinicopathologic factors. A ≥3 TI-NK cells/50x high-power field (HPF) cutoff predicted pCR in the discovery and validation cohort [OR, 188 (11–3154); OR, 19.5 (5.3–71.8)]. Presence of TI-NK cells associated with prolonged DFS in both patient cohorts [HR, 0.07 (0.01–0.6); P = 0.01; HR, 0.3 (0.08–1.3); P = 0.1]. NK-, activated dendritic- and CD8 T-cell gene expression signatures positively correlated in HER2-positive tumors, supporting the value of NK cells as surrogates of effective antitumor immunity. Stratification of patients by tumor HLA-I expression identified patients with low and high relapse risk independently of pCR. Conclusions: This study identifies baseline TI-NK cells as an independent biomarker with great predictive value for pCR to anti-HER2 antibody–based treatment and points to the complementary value of tumor HLA-I status for defining patient prognosis independently of pCR.

https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-18-2365