Cancers (Mar 2022)

Prognostic Impact of High Baseline Stromal Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes in the Absence of Pathologic Complete Response in Early-Stage Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

  • Nour Abuhadra,
  • Ryan Sun,
  • Jennifer K. Litton,
  • Gaiane M. Rauch,
  • Clinton Yam,
  • Jeffrey T. Chang,
  • Sahil Seth,
  • Roland Bassett,
  • Bora Lim,
  • Alastair M. Thompson,
  • Elizabeth Mittendorf,
  • Beatriz E. Adrada,
  • Senthil Damodaran,
  • Jason White,
  • Elizabeth Ravenberg,
  • Rosalind Candelaria,
  • Banu Arun,
  • Naoto T. Ueno,
  • Lumarie Santiago,
  • Sadia Saleem,
  • Sausan Abouharb,
  • Rashmi K. Murthy,
  • Nuhad Ibrahim,
  • Aysegul A. Sahin,
  • Vicente Valero,
  • William Fraser Symmans,
  • Debu Tripathy,
  • Stacy Moulder,
  • Lei Huo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051323
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. 1323

Abstract

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High stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are associated with an improved pathologic complete response (pCR) and survival in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). We hypothesized that high baseline sTILs would have a favorable prognostic impact in TNBC patients without a pCR after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT). In this prospective NACT study, pretreatment biopsies from 318 patients with early-stage TNBC were evaluated for sTILs. Recursive partitioning analysis (RPA) was applied to search for the sTIL cutoff best associated with a pCR. With ≥20% sTILs identified as the optimal cutoff, 33% patients had high sTILs (pCR rate 64%) and 67% had low sTILs (pCR rate 29%). Patients were stratified according to the sTIL cutoff (low vs. high) and response to NACT (pCR vs. residual disease (RD)). The primary endpoint was event-free survival (EFS), with hazard ratios calculated using the Cox proportional hazards regression model and the 3-year restricted mean survival time (RMST) as primary measures. Within the high-sTIL group, EFS was better in patients with a pCR compared with those with RD (HR 0.05; 95% CI 0.01–0.39; p = 0.004). The difference in the 3-year RMST for EFS between the two groups was 5.6 months (95% CI 2.3–8.8; p = 0.001). However, among patients with RD, EFS was not significantly different between those with high sTILs and those with low sTILs (p = 0.7). RNA-seq analysis predicted more CD8+ T cells in the high-sTIL group with favorable EFS compared with the high-sTIL group with unfavorable EFS. This study did not demonstrate that high baseline sTILs confer a benefit in EFS in the absence of a pCR.

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