Journal of Translational Medicine (Mar 2025)

PD-L1+ CD49f+ CD133+ Circulating tumor cells predict outcome of patients with vulvar or cervical cancer after radio- and chemoradiotherapy

  • Selina Gies,
  • Patrick Melchior,
  • Istvan Molnar,
  • Gregor Olmes,
  • Russalina Stroeder,
  • Tanja Tänzer,
  • Maike Pohlers,
  • Moritz Schäfer,
  • Laura Theobald,
  • Martina Sester,
  • Erich Franz Solomayer,
  • Barbara Walch-Rückheim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-025-06277-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Monitoring individual therapy responses of patients with cancer represents a major clinical challenge providing the basis to early identify metastases and cancer relapse. We previously demonstrated that radio- or chemoradiotherapy affects the systemic cellular milieu of patients with vulvar or cervical cancer and creates individual post-therapeutic environments associated with cancer relapse. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the systemic milieu are related to metastases and relapse; however, their quantitative and phenotypic characteristics during therapy of patients with vulvar and cervical cancer are still unknown. Methods In this prospective, longitudinal study, we verified the presence of CTCs via immunofluorescence and systemically characterized CTCs by flow cytometry from the blood of 40 patients with vulvar and 115 patients with cervical cancer receiving surgery, adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT), chemoradiotherapy (aCRT) or primary chemoradiotherapy (pCRT) and linked the presence of different CTC subpopulations with individual outcome of disease. Results Pre-therapeutic cytokeratin+ CD45− CTC numbers significantly correlated with tumor FIGO stages, lymph node metastases and relapse. While surgery only did not significantly alter CTC occurrence, aRT and aCRT as well as pCRT differentially decreased or increased CTCs in patients with both tumor entities compared to baseline levels. Therapy-mediated increased CTC numbers were directly linked with subsequent cancer recurrence on follow-up. Phenotypic characterization of CTCs revealed enhanced expression of the stem cell marker CD133 as well as the integrin α6 (CD49f) after aRT, aCRT and pCRT. Furthermore, the aRT, aCRT and pCRT cohorts exhibited increased proportions of Programmed Cell Death Protein Ligand (PD-L1) expressing cells among post-therapeutic CTCs. Notably, post-therapeutic PD-L1+ CD49f+ CD133+ numbers ≥ 5/ml in patients with vulvar cancer and ≥ 2/ml in patients with cervical cancer were associated with reduced recurrence-free survival on follow-up. Conclusion Our study unravels individual therapy-induced changes in CTC phenotypic characteristics and occurrence in the patients’ blood and their association with cancer relapse. Our results may help to explain differences in the individual courses of disease of patients with vulvar and cervical cancer and suggest PD-L1, CD49f and CD133 as targets for immunotherapy in vulvar and cervical cancer.

Keywords