Cancers (Jan 2021)

Tumor-Infiltrating CD20<sup>+</sup> B Lymphocytes: Significance and Prognostic Implications in Oral Cancer Microenvironment

  • Faustino Julián Suárez-Sánchez,
  • Paloma Lequerica-Fernández,
  • Juan Pablo Rodrigo,
  • Francisco Hermida-Prado,
  • Julián Suárez-Canto,
  • Tania Rodríguez-Santamarta,
  • Francisco Domínguez-Iglesias,
  • Juana M. García-Pedrero,
  • Juan Carlos de Vicente

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13030395
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 395

Abstract

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Immunohistochemical analysis of stromal/tumoral CD20+ B lymphocytes was performed in 125 OSCC patients. Correlations with immune profiles CD4+, CD8+, and FOXP3+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), tumoral PD-L1, and stem-related factors NANOG and SOX2 were assessed, and also associations with clinical data and patient survival. There was a strong positive correlation between the infiltration of CD20+ B lymphocytes and other immune profiles (i.e., CD4+, CD8+, and FOXP3+ TILs, and CD68+ and CD163+ macrophages) both in stroma and tumor nests. Strikingly, CD20+ TILs were inversely correlated with NANOG/SOX2 expression. Stromal CD20+ TILs were significantly associated with T classification and second primary tumors. A stratified survival analysis showed that tumoral CD20+ TILs were significantly associated with prognosis in male and younger patients, with tobacco or alcohol consumption, high tumoral CD8+ TILs, low tumoral infiltration by CD68+ macrophages, positive PD-L1 expression, and negative NANOG/SOX2. Multivariate Cox analysis further revealed clinical stage and tumoral CD20+ TILs independently associated with disease-specific survival (HR = 2.42, p = 0.003; and HR = 0.57, p = 0.04, respectively). In conclusion, high CD20+ TIL density emerges as an independent good prognostic factor in OSCC, suggesting a role in antitumor immunity. This study also uncovered an inverse correlation between CD20+ TILs and CSC marker expression.

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