S. S. Patel, Orthopaedic Spine Service, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
S. S. Patel, S. P. Nota, S. Ferrone, J. H. Schwab, Orthopaedic Oncology Service, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Jun 1;479(6):1373-1382. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001587.
There are no effective systemic therapies for chordoma. The recent successes of immunotherapeutic strategies in other cancers have resulted in a resurgence of interest in using immunotherapy in chordoma. These approaches rely on a functional interaction between the host's immune system and the expression of tumor peptides via the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) Class I antigen. It is not known whether chordoma cells express the HLA Class I antigen.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Do chordoma tumors exhibit defects in HLA Class I antigen expression? (2) What is the pattern of lymphocyte infiltration in chordoma tumors?
Patients with chordoma treated at Massachusetts General Hospital between 1989 and 2009 were identified with permission from the institutional review board. Of the 75 patients who were identified, 24 human chordoma tumors were selected from 24 distinct patients based on tissue availability. Histology slides from these 24 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded chordoma tissue samples were deparaffinized using xylene and ethanol and underwent heat-induced antigen retrieval in a citrate buffer. Samples were incubated with monoclonal antibodies directed against HLA Class I antigen processing machinery components. Antibody binding was detected via immunohistochemical staining. Staining intensity (negative, weakly positive, strongly positive) was assessed semiquantitatively and the percentage of chordoma cells stained for HLA Class I antigen subunits was assessed quantitatively. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained histology slides from the same 24 chordoma samples were assessed qualitatively for the presence of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and histologic location of these lymphocytes. Immunohistochemical staining with monoclonal antibodies directed against CD4 and CD8 was performed in a quantitative manner to identify the lymphocyte subtype present in chordoma tumors. All results were scored independently by two investigators and were confirmed by a senior bone and soft tissue pathologist.
Seven of 24 chordoma samples exhibited no staining by the anti-HLA-A heavy chain monoclonal antibody HC-A2, two had weak staining intensity, and eight had a heterogeneous staining pattern, with fewer than 60% of chordoma cells exhibiting positive staining results. Four of 24 samples tested were not stained by the anti-HLA-B/C heavy chain monoclonal antibody HC-10, five had weak staining intensity, and 11 displayed a heterogeneous staining pattern. For the anti-β-2-microglobulin monoclonal antibody NAMB-1, staining was detected in all samples, but 11 had weak staining intensity and four displayed a heterogeneous staining pattern. Twenty-one of 24 samples tested had decreased expression in at least one subunit of HLA Class I antigens. No tumors were negative for all three subunits. Lymphocytic infiltration was found in 21 of 24 samples. Lymphocytes were primarily found in the fibrous septae between chordoma lobules but also within the tumor lobules and within the fibrous septae and tumor lobules. Twenty-one of 24 tumors had CD4+ T cells and 11 had CD8+ T cells.
In chordoma tissue samples, HLA Class I antigen defects commonly were present, suggesting a mechanism for escape from host immunosurveillance. Additionally, nearly half of the tested samples had cytotoxic CD8+ T cells present in chordoma tumors, suggesting that the host may be capable of mounting an immune response against chordoma tumors. The resulting selective pressure imposed on chordoma tumors may lead to the outgrowth of chordoma cell subpopulations that can evade the host's immune system.
These findings have implications in the design of immunotherapeutic strategies for chordoma treatment. T cell recognition of tumor cells requires HLA Class I antigen expression on the targeted tumor cells. Defects in HLA Class I expression may play a role in the clinical course of chordoma and may account for the limited or lack of efficacy of T cell-based immunity triggered by vaccines and/or checkpoint inhibitors.
目前尚无有效的 chordoma 系统性治疗方法。近年来免疫治疗策略在其他癌症中的成功应用,促使人们重新关注 chordoma 的免疫治疗。这些方法依赖于宿主免疫系统与通过人类白细胞抗原(HLA)I 类抗原表达的肿瘤肽之间的功能相互作用。目前尚不清楚 chordoma 细胞是否表达 HLA I 类抗原。
问题/目的:(1) chordoma 肿瘤是否存在 HLA I 类抗原表达缺陷?(2) chordoma 肿瘤中的淋巴细胞浸润模式是什么?
在麻省总医院接受治疗的 chordoma 患者经机构审查委员会许可后确定。在确定的 75 名患者中,根据组织可用性从 24 名不同的患者中选择了 24 个人类 chordoma 肿瘤。这些 24 个福尔马林固定石蜡包埋的 chordoma 组织样本的组织学切片使用二甲苯和乙醇脱蜡,并在柠檬酸盐缓冲液中进行热诱导抗原修复。样本与针对 HLA I 类抗原加工机制成分的单克隆抗体孵育。通过免疫组织化学染色检测抗体结合。通过半定量评估染色强度(阴性、弱阳性、强阳性)和定量评估 HLA I 类抗原亚单位染色的 chordoma 细胞百分比来评估染色强度。从同一 24 个 chordoma 样本中提取的苏木精和伊红染色组织学切片进行定性评估,以确定肿瘤浸润淋巴细胞的存在及其在这些淋巴细胞中的组织学位置。通过定量方式进行针对 CD4 和 CD8 的单克隆抗体免疫组织化学染色,以鉴定 chordoma 肿瘤中存在的淋巴细胞亚型。所有结果均由两名研究人员独立评分,并由一名高级骨和软组织病理学家确认。
在 24 个 chordoma 样本中,7 个样本的抗 HLA-A 重链单克隆抗体 HC-A2 无染色,2 个样本的染色强度较弱,8 个样本的染色模式不均匀,少于 60%的 chordoma 细胞呈阳性染色结果。在 24 个样本中,有 4 个样本未被抗 HLA-B/C 重链单克隆抗体 HC-10 染色,5 个样本的染色强度较弱,11 个样本的染色模式不均匀。针对β-2-微球蛋白单克隆抗体 NAMB-1 的检测结果显示,所有样本均有染色,但 11 个样本的染色强度较弱,4 个样本的染色模式不均匀。在 24 个样本中,有 21 个样本至少有一个 HLA I 类抗原亚单位表达减少。没有肿瘤对所有三个亚单位均呈阴性。在 24 个样本中均发现淋巴细胞浸润。淋巴细胞主要存在于 chordoma 小叶之间的纤维隔中,但也存在于肿瘤小叶内和纤维隔及肿瘤小叶内。在 24 个肿瘤中有 21 个肿瘤有 CD4+T 细胞,11 个肿瘤有 CD8+T 细胞。
在 chordoma 组织样本中,HLA I 类抗原缺陷通常存在,这表明了宿主免疫监视逃避的机制。此外,在测试的样本中近一半有细胞毒性 CD8+T 细胞存在于 chordoma 肿瘤中,这表明宿主可能能够对 chordoma 肿瘤产生免疫反应。这对 chordoma 肿瘤施加的选择性压力可能导致 chordoma 细胞亚群的生长,这些亚群可以逃避宿主的免疫系统。
这些发现对 chordoma 治疗的免疫治疗策略设计具有重要意义。T 细胞识别肿瘤细胞需要靶向肿瘤细胞上的 HLA I 类抗原表达。HLA I 类抗原表达缺陷可能在 chordoma 的临床病程中发挥作用,并可能解释疫苗和/或检查点抑制剂触发的 T 细胞免疫的有限或缺乏疗效。