Biomarker Research (May 2021)

Immunological and genetic kinetics from diagnosis to clinical progression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

  • Isabel Jiménez,
  • Bárbara Tazón-Vega,
  • Pau Abrisqueta,
  • Juan C. Nieto,
  • Sabela Bobillo,
  • Carles Palacio-García,
  • Júlia Carabia,
  • Rafael Valdés-Mas,
  • Magdalena Munuera,
  • Lluís Puigdefàbregas,
  • Genís Parra,
  • Anna Esteve-Codina,
  • Clara Franco-Jarava,
  • Gloria Iacoboni,
  • María José Terol,
  • José Antonio García-Marco,
  • Marta Crespo,
  • Francesc Bosch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40364-021-00290-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Mechanisms driving the progression of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) from its early stages are not fully understood. The acquisition of molecular changes at the time of progression has been observed in a small fraction of patients, suggesting that CLL progression is not mainly driven by dynamic clonal evolution. In order to shed light on mechanisms that lead to CLL progression, we investigated longitudinal changes in both the genetic and immunological scenarios. Methods We performed genetic and immunological longitudinal analysis using paired primary samples from untreated CLL patients that underwent clinical progression (sampling at diagnosis and progression) and from patients with stable disease (sampling at diagnosis and at long-term asymptomatic follow-up). Results Molecular analysis showed limited and non-recurrent molecular changes at progression, indicating that clonal evolution is not the main driver of clinical progression. Our analysis of the immune kinetics found an increasingly dysfunctional CD8+ T cell compartment in progressing patients that was not observed in those patients that remained asymptomatic. Specifically, terminally exhausted effector CD8+ T cells (T-betdim/−EomeshiPD1hi) accumulated, while the the co-expression of inhibitory receptors (PD1, CD244 and CD160) increased, along with an altered gene expression profile in T cells only in those patients that progressed. In addition, malignant cells from patients at clinical progression showed enhanced capacity to induce exhaustion-related markers in CD8+ T cells ex vivo mainly through a mechanism dependent on soluble factors including IL-10. Conclusions Altogether, we demonstrate that the interaction with the immune microenvironment plays a key role in clinical progression in CLL, thereby providing a rationale for the use of early immunotherapeutic intervention.

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