Abstract
Objectives
To clarify comprehensive immunological signature patterns of tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes in patients with renal cell carcinoma and show its clinical significance.
Materials and methods
We investigated the surface marker expressions of tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes quantitatively and classified them based on their functional populations. We extracted 109 sets of tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes from 80 patients who underwent surgical resection of renal cell carcinoma, of which 44 tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes were multiply extracted from 15 patients. Each tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocyte was characterised on the basis of functional T-cell populations using ten surface marker expressions measured by flow cytometry.
Results
All sets of the tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes were classified into three groups, which correlated significantly with Fuhrman grade (OR 0.253, 95% CI 0.094–0.678, P = 0.006). Importantly, both overall metastasis-free survival (HR 0.449, 95% CI 0.243–0.832, P = 0.011) and recurrence-free survival (HR 0.475, 95% CI 0.238–0.948, P = 0.035) of the patients with the higher marker expressions were significantly inferior to those of the patients with the lower marker expressions by multivariate analysis. Six specific genes for this classification identified by microarray analysis verified our results using the TCGA KIRC data set. In addition, we discovered the presence of intra-tumoural diversity in the classification of 3 (20%) of the 15 patients.
Conclusions
This study showed that the presence of classable diversity in the immunological signature of tumour tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes correlated with prognosis and tumour aggressiveness that was observed even within individual tumours in some patients with renal cell carcinoma.
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