(New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology: ÚNKP-21-3)
(Hungarian Respiratory Society)
New National Excellence Program(ÚNKP‐19‐4)
Szakterületek:
Onkológia
Pharmacological inhibition of the immune-checkpoint molecule CD47 has shown promising
results in preclinical small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) models, whereas anti-programmed
death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitors have been recently implemented in the standard of
care of advanced-stage SCLC patients. Nevertheless, the expression pattern, clinical
relevance and prognostic implication of both CD47 and PD-L1 are rather controversial
in surgically treated SCLC patients.In total, 104 Caucasian SCLC patients from two
Central European thoracic centers were included in this study. CD47 and PD-L1 expression
as well as the expression of the four major SCLC molecular subtype markers (ASCL1,
NEUROD1, YAP1 and POU2F3) were measured by immunohistochemistry. Expression levels
were independently evaluated and statistically correlated with clinicopathological
data and survival.Positive CD47 and PD-L1 expressions were seen in 84.6% and 9.6%
of the samples, respectively. Meanwhile, the tumor-associated stroma was positive
for PD-L1 in 59.6% of the cases. Stromal PD-L1 expression correlated with longer overall
survival (OS) (versus PD-L1-negative stroma; median OS was 42 versus 14 months, respectively,
P = 0.003) and was confirmed as an independent predictor of favorable outcome upon
multivariate analysis (hazard ratio 0.530, 95% confidence interval 0.298-0.943, P
= 0.031). Notably, neither CD47 nor PD-L1 presence was related to a distinct molecular
SCLC subtype.CD47 shows a remarkably high expression while tumoral PD-L1 expression
is generally low in surgically treated SCLC. Importantly, stromal PD-L1 expression
may indicate a favorable clinical outcome and serve as a novel prognostic factor in
these patients. Additional studies are warranted to further investigate the clinical
impact of CD47 and PD-L1 expression in SCLC.