The combination of PD-L1 expression and decreased tumorinfiltrating lymphocytes is associated with a poor prognosis in triple-negative breast cancer

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Abstract

This study included patients with primary triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who underwent resection without neoadjuvant chemotherapy between January 2004 and December 2014. Among the 248 TNBCs studied, programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) expression was detected in 103 (41.5%) tumors, and high levels of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were present in 118 (47.6%) tumors. PDL1 expression correlated with high levels of TILs, but was not a prognostic factor. Patients with TILs-high tumors had better overall survival than those with TILslow tumors (P = 0.016). There was a strong interaction between PD-L1 expression and TILs that was associated with both recurrence-free survival (P = 0.0018) and overall survival (P = 0.015). Multivariate Cox proportional hazards model analysis showed that PD-L1-positive/TILs-low was an independent negative prognostic factor for both recurrence-free survival and overall survival. Our findings suggest that PDL1- positive/TILs-low tumors are associated with a poor prognosis in patients with TNBC, and that it is important to focus on the combination of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells and TILs present in the tumor microenvironment. These biomarkers may be useful for stratification of TNBCs and for predicting prognosis and developing novel cancer immunotherapies.

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Mori, H., Kubo, M., Yamaguchi, R., Nishimura, R., Osako, T., Arima, N., … Nakamura, M. (2017). The combination of PD-L1 expression and decreased tumorinfiltrating lymphocytes is associated with a poor prognosis in triple-negative breast cancer. Oncotarget, 8(9), 15584–15592. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14698

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