PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Clinical efficacy of nivolumab is associated with tertiary lymphoid structures in surgically resected primary tumors of recurrent gastric cancer.

  • Takuya Mori,
  • Hiroaki Tanaka,
  • Sota Deguchi,
  • Yoshihito Yamakoshi,
  • Yuichiro Miki,
  • Mami Yoshii,
  • Tatsuro Tamura,
  • Takahiro Toyokawa,
  • Shigeru Lee,
  • Kazuya Muguruma,
  • Masaichi Ohira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262455
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
p. e0262455

Abstract

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Nivolumab, an immune checkpoint blocker, has been approved for advanced gastric cancer (GC), but predictive factors of nivolumab's efficacy in patients with GC, especially immune cells such as tissue-resident memory T cells or those forming tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), remain unclear. Tissue samples were obtained from surgically resected specimens of patients with GC who were treated with nivolumab as third-line or later treatment. Immunohistochemical staining was performed to detect the presence of TLS and CD103+ T cells and assess the association between TLSs and response to nivolumab treatment. A total of 19 patients were analyzed. In patients with partial response (PR) to nivolumab, numerous TLS were observed, and CD103+ T cells were found in and around TLS. Patients with many TLS experienced immune-related adverse events more often than those with few TLS (p = 0.018). The prognosis of patients with TLS high was better than those with TLS low. Patients with a combination of TLS high and CD103 high tended to have a better prognosis than other groups. Our results suggested that TLS status might be a predictor of nivolumab effectiveness.