posted on 2024-11-04, 08:20authored byColt A. Egelston, Weihua Guo, Diana L. Simons, Jian Ye, Christian Avalos, Shawn T. Solomon, Mary Nwangwu, Michael S. Nelson, Jiayi Tan, Eliza R. Bacon, Kena Ihle, Daniel Schmolze, Lusine Tumyan, James R. Waisman, Peter P. Lee
Immune cell densities across tissue sites. Mean densities of immune cell subsets as determined by flow cytometry are displayed across tumor-free and tumor-involved tissues. Means were calculated across all collected patient tissues with the number of included data points shown as ‘n’. Table values are colorized from least dense (blue) to most dense (red).
Funding
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
United States Department of Health and Human Services
Immune composition within the tumor microenvironment (TME) plays a central role in the propensity of cancer cells to metastasize and respond to therapy. Previous studies have suggested that the metastatic TME is immune-suppressed. However, limited accessibility to multiple metastatic sites within patients has made assessing the immune TME difficult in the context of multiorgan metastases. We utilized a rapid postmortem tissue collection protocol to assess the immune composition of numerous sites of breast cancer metastasis and paired tumor-free tissues. Metastases had comparable immune cell densities and compositions to paired tumor-free tissues of the same organ type. In contrast, immune cell densities in both metastatic and tumor-free tissues differed significantly between organ types, with lung immune infiltration being consistently greater than that in the liver. These immune profiling results were consistent between flow cytometry and multiplex immunofluorescence–based spatial analysis. Furthermore, we found that granulocytes were the predominant tumor-infiltrating immune cells in lung and liver metastases, and these granulocytes comprised most PD–L1–expressing cells in many tissue sites. We also identified distinct potential mechanisms of immunosuppression in lung and liver metastases, with the lung having increased expression of PD-L1+ antigen-presenting cells and the liver having higher numbers of activated regulatory T cells and HLA-DRlow monocytes. Together, these results demonstrate that the immune contexture of metastases is dictated by organ type and that immunotherapy strategies may benefit from unique tailoring to the tissue-specific features of the immune TME.