Down-regulation of HLA-A expression correlates with a better prognosis in colorectal cancer patients

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Abstract

To evaluate the prognostic impact of human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I) expression on immune surveillance in colorectal cancer, we studied 88 curatively resected tumors for HLA-A and HLA-B/C expression and correlated these data to clinical and histopathological parameters. HLA-A was normal (all tumor cells had HLA expression) in 32%, reduced (HLA-negative and -positive tumor cells coexisted) in 56%, or absent (no tumor cells expressed HLA) in 12% of evaluable cases. HLA-B/C was normal in 47%, reduced in 47%, and absent in 7% of the cases. Considering both markers, total HLA-I expression was normal in 27%, reduced in 63%, absent in 7%, and could not be evaluated in 3% of the cases due to absent HLA-A expression in tumor and normal cells. Down-regulation of HLA-A expression significantly correlated with a lower tumor stage (ρ = 0.005), mucinous tumors (ρ = 0.05), a lower incidence of recurrences (ρ = 0.03), and a longer disease-free survival (ρ = 0.02). Down-regulation of HLA-B/C expression correlated with a lower tumor stage (ρ < 0.001) and a longer disease-free survival (ρ = 0.04). In multivariate analysis, HLA-A down-regulation was the only prognostic factor correlated with a longer disease-free survival (ρ = 0.02). Six tumors were negative for HLA-A and -B/C and did not recur during follow-up. Therefore, we analyzed microsatellite instability (MSI) in these cases. Three of these six tumors indeed showed down-regulation of MLH-1, MSH-2, or MSH-6, indicating a MSI-high phenotype. Beta-2-microglobulin protein expression was lost in five of six of the HLA-I-negative cases, but frame shift mutations in three repetitive sequences in β2-microglobulin were absent. In contrast, loss of MLH-1, MSH-2, and MSH-6-protein expression was only observed in two of nine matched controls with reduced or normal HLA-A and -B/C expression. Our data showed that HLA-I was down-regulated in 72% of colorectal cancers and provided independent prognostic information for a longer disease-free survival. The better prognosis may be caused by elimination of HLA-negative cells by natural killer cells or by an attenuated tumor aggressiveness, as is seen in tumors with a MSI-high phenotype.

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Menon, A. G., Morreau, H., Tollenaar, R. A. E. M., Alphenaar, E., Van Puijenbroek, M., Putter, H., … Kuppen, P. J. K. (2002). Down-regulation of HLA-A expression correlates with a better prognosis in colorectal cancer patients. Laboratory Investigation, 82(12), 1725–1733. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.LAB.0000043124.75633.ED

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