Cells (Sep 2024)

Comparative Analysis of Inhibitory and Activating Immune Checkpoints PD-1, PD-L1, CD28, and CD86 in Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer

  • Linus Winter,
  • Jutta Ries,
  • Christoph Vogl,
  • Leah Trumet,
  • Carol Immanuel Geppert,
  • Rainer Lutz,
  • Marco Kesting,
  • Manuel Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13181569
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 18
p. 1569

Abstract

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The establishment of immunotherapy applying immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) has provided an important new option for the treatment of solid malignant diseases. However, different tumor entities show dramatically different responses to this therapy. BCC responds worse to anti-PD-1 ICIs as compared to cSCC. Differential immune checkpoint expression could explain this discrepancy and, therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze activating and inhibitory immune checkpoints in cSCC and BCC tissues. Tissue microarrays of the invasive front as well as the tumor core of BCC and cSCC samples were used to evaluate PD-1, PD-L1, CD28, and CD86 expression and their topographic distribution profiles by chromogenic immunohistochemistry. QuPath was used to determine the labeling index. The expression of PD-1, PD-L1, and CD28 was significantly higher in both the tumor core and the invasive front of cSCC samples as compared to BCC (p p p < 0.001) were significantly higher in cSCC. The invasive front of both tumor entities showed higher expression levels of all immune markers compared to the tumor core in both tumor entities. The significantly higher expression of PD-1, PD-L1, and CD28 in cSCC, along with the predominance of the inhibitory ligand PD-L1 as compared to the activating CD86 in cSCC, provide a potential explanation for the better objective response rates to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy as compared to BCC. Furthermore, the predominant site of interaction between the immune system and the tumor was within the invasive front in both tumor types.

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