T-Cell Activation Marker Expression on Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes As Prognostic Factor in Cutaneous Malignant Melanoma
- 15 January 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) in Clinical Cancer Research
- Vol. 10 (2) , 521-530
- https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-1161-03
Abstract
The central role of T cells in antitumor immunity is well established. However, tumor progression, often seen in the presence of substantial lymphocytic infiltration, suggests that these T cells are not capable of mounting an effective immune response to control tumor growth. Evidence has accumulated that T lymphocytes infiltrating human neoplasms are functionally defective, incompletely activated, or anergic. Therefore, when characterizing the immune competent cells within lymphoid infiltrates of tumors, it is important to assess their activation state. We investigated the expression of two T-cell activation markers, interleukin 2 receptor α (CD25) and OX40 (CD134), by immunohistochemistry in primary cutaneous melanoma samples of 76 patients and analyzed it in relation to tumor stage and tumor progression (>5 years follow-up), as well as to patients’ survival. We found that the degree of infiltration by CD25+ and intratumoral OX40+ lymphocytes showed a tendency to decrease in thicker melanomas. The frequency of samples with high numbers of peritumoral CD25+ and OX40+ cells was significantly lower (P = 0.0009 and P = 0.0087, respectively) in melanomas developing distant visceral metastases, compared with nonmetastatic or lymph node metastatic tumors. For both activation markers studied, high peritumoral densities were associated with longer survival by univariate analysis (P = 0.0028 and P = 0.0255 for CD25 and OX40, respectively), whereas peritumoral OX40+ lymphocyte infiltration had an impact on survival also in multivariate analysis (P = 0.035). The results suggest that the presence of lymphocytes expressing the T-cell activation markers CD25 or OX40 shows correlation with tumor progression as well as with patients’ survival in cutaneous malignant melanoma.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- CD3‐ζchain expression of intratumoral lymphocytes is closely related to survival in gastric carcinoma patientsCancer, 2002
- Increased activation of lymphocytes infiltrating primary colorectal cancers following immunisation with the anti-idiotypic monoclonal antibody 105AD7Gut, 1999
- Characterisation of tumour infiltrating lymphocytes and correlations with immunological surface molecules in colorectal cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1999
- OX-40: life beyond the effector T cell stageSeminars in Immunology, 1998
- Clinical responses and lymphoid infiltrates in metastatic melanoma following treatment with intralesional GM-CSFMelanoma Research, 1996
- Histological grade, perineural infiltration, tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes and apoptosis as determinants of long-term prognosis in prostatic adenocarcinomaEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1994
- Tumor escape mechanisms from immunosurveillance: induction of unresponsiveness in a specific MHC-restricted CD4+; human T cell clone by the autologous MHC class II+ melanomaInternational Immunology, 1993
- Lymphocyte infiltrates as a prognostic variable in female breast cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1992
- Model Predicting Survival in Stage I Melanoma Based on Tumor ProgressionJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1989
- A Retrospective Histological Study of 669 Cases of Primary Cutaneous Malignant Melanoma in Clinical Stage IActa Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Section A Pathology, 1978