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Identification and validation of poor prognosis immunoevasive subtype of muscle-invasive bladder cancer with tumor-infiltrating podoplanin <sup>+</sup> cell abundance

Quan Zhou, Zewei Wang, Han Zeng, Hongyu Zhang, Zhaopei Liu, Qiuren Huang, Jiajun Wang, Yuan Chang, Qi Bai, Li Liu, Yu Zhu, Le Xu, Bo Dai, Jianming Guo, Yu Xia, Yiwei Wang, Jiejie Xu

2020OncoImmunology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The choice of chemo- or immuno-therapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) patients remains contentious. Podoplanin is newly identified as an immune checkpoint which intrigues us to explore the clinical significance and immunoregulatory role of tumor-infiltrating podoplanin+ cells (PDPN+ cells) in MIBC. A retrospective analysis of 259 MIBC patients from Zhongshan Hospital (n = 141) and Shanghai Cancer Center (n = 118) was conducted. A total of 406 MIBC patients from TCGA database were enrolled to investigate the relationship between PDPN and molecular characterization. We found that tumor-infiltrating PDPN+ cell abundance indicated an inferior overall survival and recurrence-free survival. pT2 MIBC patients with PDPN+ cell low infiltration could benefit more from adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT). Increased PDPN+ cell infiltration was associated with diminished GZMB and TNF-α expression while correlated with expanded PD-1, PD-L1, LAG-3 and TIM-3 expression and tumor-promoting regulatory T cell and M2 macrophage infiltration. Tumors with high PDPN mRNA expression mainly presented luminal-infiltrated and basal-squamous subtypes (2017 TCGA classification) or stroma-rich and Ba/Sq subtypes (consensus classification). Elevated PDPN mRNA expression was associated with less FGFR3 activation signature and more T-cell-inflamed signature and EGFR activation signature. In conclusion, tumor-infiltrating PDPN+ cells could be applied as an independent prognosticator for clinical outcome and a predictive biomarker for suboptimal ACT responsiveness, which was also associated with immunosuppressive contexture infiltration. Intratumoral PDPN expression had a correlation with MIBC molecular classification and therapy-related signatures. The novel immune checkpoint PDPN should be considered as a possible immunotherapeutic target for MIBC.

Topics & Concepts

PodoplaninBladder cancerMedicineIdentification (biology)CancerAbundance (ecology)OncologyInternal medicineCancer researchPathologyBiologyImmunohistochemistryEcologyBladder and Urothelial Cancer TreatmentsCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersUrinary and Genital Oncology Studies
Identification and validation of poor prognosis immunoevasive subtype of muscle-invasive bladder cancer with tumor-infiltrating podoplanin <sup>+</sup> cell abundance | Litcius