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Intratumoral PD1 + CD38 + Tim3 + CD8 + T Cells in Pre-BCG Tumor Tissues Are Associated with Poor Responsiveness to BCG Immunotherapy in Patients with Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer.

Debashree BasakSoumya MondalSwadeep Kumar SrivastavaDeborpita SarkarIshita SarkarSukanya BasuArpita BhoumikSnehanshu ChowdhuryDilip Kumar PalShilpak Chatterjee
Published in: Cells (2023)
Intravesical immunotherapy with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) is a standard of care therapy for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), which accounts for about 75% of newly diagnosed urothelial cancer. However, given the frequent recurrence and progression, identification of a pre-treatment biomarker capable of predicting responsiveness to BCG in NMIBC is of utmost importance. Herein, using multiparametric flow cytometry, we characterized CD8 + T cells from peripheral blood and tumor tissues collected from 27 pre-BCG patients bearing NMIBC to obtain immune correlates of bladder cancer prognosis and responsiveness to BCG therapy. We observed that intratumoral CD8 + T cell subsets were highly heterogenous in terms of their differentiation state and exist at different proportions in tumor tissues. Remarkably, among the different CD8 + T cell subsets present in the tumor tissues, the frequency of the terminally exhausted-like CD8 + T cell subset, marked as PD1 + CD38 + Tim3 + CD8 + T cells, was inversely correlated with a favorable outcome for patients and a responsiveness to BCG therapy. Moreover, we also noted that the intratumoral abundance of the progenitor exhausted-like PD1 + CD8 + T cell subset in pre-BCG NMIBC tumor tissues was indicative of better recurrence-free survival after BCG. Collectively, our study led to the identification of biomarkers that can predict the therapeutic responsiveness of BCG in NMIBC.
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