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Tumor cell expression of HLA-DM associates with a Th1 profile and predicts improved survival in breast carcinoma patients
Author(s) -
Sharon A. Oldford,
J. Desmond Robb,
D. Codner,
Veeresh Gadag,
Peter H. Watson,
Sheila Drover
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
international immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.86
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1460-2377
pISSN - 0953-8178
DOI - 10.1093/intimm/dxl092
Subject(s) - medicine , breast carcinoma , breast cancer , oncology , cd8 , tumor infiltrating lymphocytes , estrogen receptor , immune system , carcinoma , human leukocyte antigen , cancer research , biology , immunology , cancer , antigen
Studies aimed at elucidating the immunological and prognostic significance of HLA-DR expression on breast carcinoma cells have yielded contradictory results. To expand on previous studies, we have investigated the associations of tumor cell expression of HLA-DR and its related co-chaperones, invariant chain (Ii) and HLA-DM, with infiltrating inflammatory cells, in situ cytokine mRNA levels and prognosis and outcome in 112 breast carcinoma patients with a median follow-up of 59 months. While the majority of HLA-DR+ tumors co-express Ii, only a minority express HLA-DM. Tumor cell expression of HLA-DR and co-chaperones positively associated with both infiltrating CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell subsets (P < 0.01). Expression of HLA-DR and Ii associated with decreased estrogen receptor alpha levels and younger age at diagnosis, suggesting a role for hormones in the control of HLA class II expression in breast carcinoma. Patients with DR+Ii+DM- tumors had markedly decreased recurrence-free and disease-specific survival as compared with patients with DR+Ii+DM+ tumors (P < 0.05) and HLA-DR/co-chaperone expression was an independent predictor of survival by multivariate Cox regression analysis, controlling for standard prognostic indicators. Tumors that co-express HLA-DR, Ii and HLA-DM have increased levels of IFN-gamma, IL-2 and IL-12 mRNA, suggesting improved survival of patients with DR+Ii+DM+ tumors may be attributable to Th1-dominated immunity. We conclude that expression of determinants of the immune response by tumor cells may influence breast tumor progression and patient outcome.

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