Login / Signup

Impact of surgery-induced myeloid-derived suppressor cells and the NOX2/ROS axis on post-operative survival in human pancreatic cancer.

Hanna Grauers WiktorinEbru AydinRoberta KiffinCaroline VilhavJohan Bourghardt FagmanMustafa KayaSanchari PaulBeatrice WestmanSvein Olav BratliePeter NarediKristoffer HellstrandAnna Martner
Published in: Cancer research communications (2024)
Preclinical studies imply that surgery triggers inflammation that may entail tumor outgrowth and metastasis. The potential impact of surgery-induced inflammation in human pancreatic cancer is insufficiently explored. This study included 17 patients with periampullary cancer (pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) n=14, ampullary carcinoma n=2, cholangiocarcinoma n=1) undergoing major pancreatic cancer surgery with curative intent. We analyzed the potential impact of pre- and postoperative immune phenotypes and function on postoperative survival with >30 months follow-up. The surgery entailed prompt expansion of monocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (M-MDSC) that generated NOX2-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS). Strong induction of immunosuppressive M-MDSC after surgery predicted poor post-operative survival and coincided with reduced functionality of circulating NK cells. The negative impact of surgery-induced M-MDSC on survival remained significant in separate analysis of PDAC patients. M-MDSC-like cells isolated from patients after surgery significantly suppressed NK cell function ex vivo, which was reversed by inhibition of NOX2-derived ROS. High NOX2 subunit expression within resected tumors from PDAC patients correlated with poor survival whereas high expression of markers of cytotoxic cells associated with longer survival. The surgery-induced myeloid inflammation was recapitulated in vivo in a murine model of NK cell-dependent metastasis. Surgical stress thus induced systemic accumulation of M-MDSC-like cells and promoted metastasis of NK cell-sensitive tumor cells. Genetic or pharmacological suppression of NOX2 reduced surgery-induced inflammation and distant metastasis in this model. We propose that NOX2-derived ROS generated by surgery-induced M-MDSC may be targeted for improved outcome after pancreatic cancer surgery.
Keyphrases