Frontiers in Immunology (Jun 2024)

Clinical and translational implications of immunotherapy in sarcomas

  • Federica Recine,
  • Silvia Vanni,
  • Alberto Bongiovanni,
  • Valentina Fausti,
  • Laura Mercatali,
  • Giacomo Miserocchi,
  • Chiara Liverani,
  • Federica Pieri,
  • Roberto Casadei,
  • Davide Cavaliere,
  • Pina Tiziana Falbo,
  • Danila Diano,
  • Toni Ibrahim,
  • Alessandro De Vita

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1378398
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Immunotherapy has emerged as promising treatment in sarcomas, but the high variability in terms of histology, clinical behavior and response to treatments determines a particular challenge for its role in these neoplasms. Tumor immune microenvironment (TiME) of sarcomas reflects the heterogeneity of these tumors originating from mesenchymal cells and encompassing more than 100 histologies. Advances in the understanding of the complexity of TiME have led to an improvement of the immunotherapeutic responsiveness in sarcomas, that at first showed disappointing results. The proposed immune-classification of sarcomas based on the interaction between immune cell populations and tumor cells showed to have a prognostic and potential predictive role for immunotherapies. Several studies have explored the clinical impact of immune therapies in the management of these histotypes leading to controversial results. The presence of Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes (TIL) seems to correlate with an improvement in the survival of patients and with a higher responsiveness to immunotherapy. In this context, it is important to consider that also immune-related genes (IRGs) have been demonstrated to have a key role in tumorigenesis and in the building of tumor immune microenvironment. The IRGs landscape in soft tissue and bone sarcomas is characterized by the connection between several tumor-related genes that can assume a potential prognostic and predictive therapeutic role. In this paper, we reviewed the state of art of the principal immune strategies in the management of sarcomas including their clinical and translational relevance.

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