The impact of Esophageal Oncological Surgery on perioperative immune function; implications for adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibition
Citation:
Donlon N.E., Davern M,, Sheppard A., O'Connell F., Dunne M., Hayes C., Mylod, E., Ramjit S., Temperley H., Mc Lean M., Cotter G., Bhardwaj A., Butler C., Conroy, M.J., O' Sullivan J., Ravi N., Donohoe C., Reynolds, J.V., Lysaght, J., The impact of Esophageal Oncological Surgery on perioperative immune function; implications for adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibition., Frontiers in Immunol, 2022Download Item:
Abstract:
Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are being investigated for their role as
an adjunct in the multimodal treatment of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). The most
effective time to incorporate ICIs remains unknown. Our study profiles systemic anti-tumor
immunity perioperatively to help inform the optimal timing of ICIs into current standards of
care for EAC patients.
Methods: Systemic immunity in 11 EAC patients was phenotyped immediately prior to
esophagectomy (POD-0) and post-operatively (POD)-1, 3, 7 and week 6. Longitudinal
serological profiling was conducted by ELISA. The frequency of circulating lymphocytes,
activation status, immune checkpoint expression and damage-associated molecular
patterns was assessed by flow cytometry.
Results: The frequency of naïve T-cells significantly increased in circulation post-
esophagectomy from POD-0 to POD-7 (p<0.01) with a significant decrease in effector
memory T-cells by POD7 followed by a subsequent increase by week 6 (p<0.05). A
significant increase in activated circulating CD27+ T-cells was observed from POD-0 to
POD-7 (p<0.05). The percentage of PD-1 + and CTLA-4 + T-cells peaked on POD-1 and
was significantly decreased by week 6 (p<0.01). There was a significant increase in
soluble PD-1, PD-L2, TIGIT and LAG-3 from POD-3 to week 6 (p<0.01). Increased
checkpoint expression correlated with those who developed metastatic disease early in
their postoperative course. Th1 cytokines and co-stimulatory factors decreased
significantly in the immediate post-operative setting, with a reduction in IFN-g, IL-
12p40, IL-1RA, CD28, CD40L and TNF-a. A simultaneous increase was observed in
Th2 cytokines in the immediate post-operative setting, with a significant increase in IL-4,
IL-10, IL-16 and MCP-1 before returning to preoperative levels at week 6.
Conclusion: Our study highlights the prevailing Th2-like immunophenotype post-
surgery. Therefore, shifting the balance in favour of a Th1-like phenotype would offer a
potent therapeutic approach to promote cancer regression and prevent recurrence in the
adjuvant setting and could potentially propagate anti-tumour immune responses
perioperatively if administered in the immediate neoadjuvant setting. Consequently, this
body of work paves the way for further studies and appropriate trial design is needed to
further interrogate and validate the use of ICI in the multimodal treatment of locally
advanced disease in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/meconroyDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Conroy, Melissa
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Frontiers in Immunol;Availability:
Full text availableSubject:
perioperative immunosuppression, immunotherapy, surgery, neoadjuvant, esophageal cancer, adjuvantSubject (TCD):
Cancer , Immunology, Inflammation & Infection , Biomedical sciences , CANCER , Immune system , Tumour immunology and immunotherapyISSN:
PMID: 35154142Metadata
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