Clinical Relevance of the Comparative Expression of Immune Checkpoint Markers with the Clinicopathological Findings in Patients with Primary and Chemoreduced Retinoblastoma
Overview
Oncology
Pharmacology
Authors
Affiliations
Purpose: The goal of this study is to identify the pathological findings and expression of immune checkpoint marker (PD-1, PD-L1, and CTLA-4) in the tumor microenvironment of both primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma and correlate them with clinicopathological parameters and patient outcome.
Methods: Total of 262 prospective cases was included prospectively in which 144 cases underwent primary enucleation and 118 cases received chemotherapy/radiotherapy before enucleation (chemoreduced retinoblastoma). Immunohistochemistry, qRT-PCR and western blotting were performed to evaluate the expression pattern of immune checkpoint markers in primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma.
Results: Tumor microenvironment were different for both primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma. Expression of PD-1 was found in 29/144 (20.13%) and 48/118 (40.67%) in primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma, respectively, whereas PD-L1 was expressed in 46/144 (31.94%) and 22/118 (18.64%) in cases of primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma, respectively. Expression pattern of CTLA-4 protein was similar in both groups of retinoblastoma. On multivariate analysis, massive choroidal invasion, bilaterality and PD-L1 expression (p = 0.034) were found to be statistically significant factors in primary retinoblastoma, whereas PD-1 expression (p = 0.015) and foamy macrophages were significant factors in chemoreduced retinoblastoma. Overall survival was reduced in cases of PD-L1 (80.76%) expressed primary retinoblastoma, and PD-1 (63.28%) expressed chemoreduced retinoblastoma.
Conclusions: This is the first of its kind study predicting a relevant role of the immune checkpoint markers in both groups of primary and chemoreduced retinoblastoma with prognostic significance. Differential expression of these markers in both group of retinoblastoma is a novel finding and might be an interesting and beneficial target for chemoresistant tumors.
Prospects of anti-GD2 immunotherapy for retinoblastoma.
Zhang X, You W, Wang Y, Dejenie R, Wang C, Huang Y Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1499700.
PMID: 39620227 PMC: 11604707. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1499700.
Epidemiology, Diagnosis and Genetics of Retinoblastoma: ICMR Consensus Guidelines.
Singh L, Chinnaswamy G, Meel R, Radhakrishnan V, Madan R, Kulkarni S Indian J Pediatr. 2024; 91(11):1147-1156.
PMID: 38492167 DOI: 10.1007/s12098-024-05085-2.
Chen S, Chen X, Zhang P, Chen S, Wang X, Luo Q Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2022; 63(11):28.
PMID: 36315123 PMC: 9631497. DOI: 10.1167/iovs.63.11.28.
Treatment of Retinoblastoma: What Is the Latest and What Is the Future.
Schaiquevich P, Francis J, Cancela M, Montero Carcaboso A, Chantada G, Abramson D Front Oncol. 2022; 12:822330.
PMID: 35433448 PMC: 9010858. DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.822330.
Miracco C, Toti P, Gelmi M, Aversa S, Baldino G, Galluzzi P Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2021; 62(2):6.
PMID: 33538768 PMC: 7862737. DOI: 10.1167/iovs.62.2.6.