Frontiers in Medicine (Oct 2022)

Tertiary lymphoid structures accompanied by fibrillary matrix morphology impact anti-tumor immunity in basal cell carcinomas

  • Candice Byers,
  • Melissa Gill,
  • Melissa Gill,
  • Melissa Gill,
  • Nicholas R. Kurtansky,
  • Christi Alessi-Fox,
  • Maggie Harman,
  • Miguel Cordova,
  • Salvador Gonzalez,
  • Pascale Guitera,
  • Pascale Guitera,
  • Veronica Rotemberg,
  • Ashfaq Marghoob,
  • Chih-Shan Jason Chen,
  • Jennifer Dy,
  • Jennifer Dy,
  • Kivanc Kose,
  • Milind Rajadhyaksha,
  • Aditi Sahu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.981074
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) are specialized lymphoid formations that serve as local repertoire of T- and B-cells at sites of chronic inflammation, autoimmunity, and cancer. While presence of TLS has been associated with improved response to immune checkpoint blockade therapies and overall outcomes in several cancers, its prognostic value in basal cell carcinoma (BCC) has not been investigated. Herein, we determined the prognostic impact of TLS by relating its prevalence and maturation with outcome measures of anti-tumor immunity, namely tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and tumor killing. In 30 distinct BCCs, we show the presence of TLS was significantly enriched in tumors harboring a nodular component and more mature primary TLS was associated with TIL counts. Moreover, assessment of the fibrillary matrix surrounding tumors showed discrete morphologies significantly associated with higher TIL counts, critically accounting for heterogeneity in TIL count distribution within TLS maturation stages. Specifically, increased length of fibers and lacunarity of the matrix with concomitant reduction in density and alignment of fibers were present surrounding tumors displaying high TIL counts. Given the interest in inducing TLS formation as a therapeutic intervention as well as its documented prognostic value, elucidating potential impediments to the ability of TLS in driving anti-tumor immunity within the tumor microenvironment warrants further investigation. These results begin to address and highlight the need to integrate stromal features which may present a hindrance to TLS formation and/or effective function as a mediator of immunotherapy response.

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