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Analyses of tumor microenvironment in patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma receiving immunotherapy (Meet-URO 18 study).

Fabio CatalanoMatteo BrunelliAlessio SignoriPasquale RescignoSebastiano ButiLuca GalliMassimiliano SpadaCristina MasiniFrancesca GaluppiniValerio Gaetano VelloneGabriele GaggeroMaruzzo MarcoSara MerlerFrancesca VignaniAlessia CavoDavide BimbattiMichele MilellaAngelo Paolo Dei TosMarta SbaragliaVeronica MurianniAlessandra DamassiMalvina CremanteMichele MaffezzoliMiguel Angel Llaja ObispoGiuseppe Luigi BannaGiuseppe FornariniSara Elena Rebuzzi
Published in: Future oncology (London, England) (2024)
Introduction: The Meet-URO 18 study is a multicentric study of patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma receiving nivolumab in the second-line and beyond, categorized as responders (progression-free survival ≥ 12 months) and non-responders (progression-free survival < 3 months). Areas covered: The current study includes extensive immunohistochemical analysis of T-lineage markers (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD8/CD4 ratio), macrophages (CD68), ph-mTOR, CD15 and CD56 expression on tumor cells, and PD-L1 expression, on an increased sample size including 161 tumor samples (113 patients) compared with preliminary presented data. Responders ' tumor tissue (n = 90; 55.9%) was associated with lower CD4 expression ( p = 0.014), higher CD56 expression ( p = 0.046) and higher CD8/CD4 ratio ( p = 0.030). Expert opinion/commentary: The present work suggests the regulatory role of a subpopulation of T cells on antitumor response and identifies CD56 as a putative biomarker of immunotherapy efficacy.
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