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The Transmembrane Receptor TIRC7 Identifies a Distinct Subset of Immune Cells with Prognostic Implications in Cholangiocarcinoma.

Thomas AlbrechtBenjamin GoeppertFritz BrinkmannAlphonse CharbelQiangnu ZhangJohannes SchreckNina WilhelmStephan SingerBruno C KöhlerChristoph SpringfeldArianeb MehrabiPeter SchirmacherAnja A KühlMonika N VogelHolger JansenNalân UtkuStephanie Roessler
Published in: Cancers (2021)
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a heterogeneous malignancy with a dismal prognosis. Therapeutic options are largely limited to surgery and conventional chemotherapy offers limited benefit. As immunotherapy has proven highly effective in various cancer types, we have undertaken a quantitative immunohistopathological assessment of immune cells expressing the immunoinhibitory T cell immune response cDNA 7 receptor (TIRC7), an emerging immunoinhibitory receptor, in a cohort of 135 CCA patients. TIRC7 + immune cells were present in both the tumor epithelia and stroma in the majority of CCA cases with the highest levels found in intrahepatic CCA. While intraepithelial density of TIRC7 + immune cells was decreased compared to matched non-neoplastic bile ducts, stromal quantity was higher in the tumor samples. Tumors exhibiting signet ring cell or adenosquamous morphology were exclusively associated with an intraepithelial TIRC7 + phenotype. Survival analysis showed intraepithelial TIRC7 + immune cell density to be a highly significant favorable prognosticator in intrahepatic but not proximal or distal CCA. Furthermore, intraepithelial TIRC7 + immune cell density correlated with the number of intraepithelial CD8 + immune cells and with the total number of CD4 + immune cells. Our results suggest the presence and prognostic relevance of TIRC7 + immune cells in CCA and warrant further functional studies on its pharmacological modulation.
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