Utility of stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocyte scoring (sTILs) for risk stratification of patients with muscle-invasive urothelial bladder cancer after radical cystectomy.

Urol Oncol

Comprehensive Cancer Center Erlangen-EMN (CCC ER-EMN), Erlangen, Germany; BRIDGE-Consortium Germany e.V., Mannheim, Germany; Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed the presence of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) and found that certain patterns of TILs can indicate better outcomes for patients undergoing radical cystectomy.
  • - Researchers evaluated TILs in 241 MIBC patients using standard stained slides and additionally performed immunohistochemistry to count various immune cell types, correlating these findings with patient survival rates and tumor characteristics.
  • - Results revealed that a higher percentage (≥10%) of stromal TILs significantly correlated with better 5-year overall survival, disease-specific survival, and recurrence-free survival, marking it as a strong independent predictor for improved patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Multi-omics analyses of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) demonstrated that specific patterns of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) associates with improved outcomes in patients treated with radical cystectomy. However, methodologies for simple and robust quantification of TILs, especially for daily practice purposes, are lacking. Thus, we investigated the feasibility of stromal TIL scoring on hematoxylin/eosin stained (HE) slides in MIBC.

Materials And Methods: sTILs were scored on HE whole slides of 241 MIBC patients treated with radical cystectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy. Median infiltration of 10% was used as objective cut-off. Additionally, immunohistochemistry was performed on spatially organized tissue microarrays to quantify key immune cell populations objectively for correlational analyses with sTIL scoring results (CD3/Pan-T-cells, CD8/cytotoxic T-Cells, CD56/NK-cells, CD68/macrophages). sTILs amounts were correlated with clinicopathological features, recurrence-free (RFS), disease-specific (DSS), and overall survival (OS).

Results: sTIL amounts correlated moderately to strongly with quantitatively estimated amounts of pan-T-cells (r = 0.73, P <0.0001), cytotoxic T-cells (r = 0.73, P <0.0001), NK-cells (r = 0.68, P <0.0001), macrophages (r = 0.55, P <0.0001) and with pan-cytotoxic immune infiltration (r = 0.78, P <0.0001), thus reflecting overall infiltration with key immune cell populations. sTIL infiltration ≥10% was associated with significantly higher 5-year OS (45.5% vs. 19.8%), DSS (56.6% vs. 25.6%) and RFS (56.2% vs. 18.9%; P <0.0001 for all three comparisons) rates, and lower pT-stage (P = 0.015), lower pN-stage (P = 0.028), lower rates of lymphovascular invasion (P = 0.0003) and blood vessel invasion (P = 0.01) when compared to sTIL infiltration of <10%. Multivariable regressions models confirmed sTILs as strongest independent predictor for improved outcomes following radical cystectomy.

Conclusions: HE based sTIL scoring is a reliable tool to assess MIBC inflammation status and to stratify the survival of MIBC patients undergoing radical cystectomy. sTIL amount is an independent predictor for improved survival, and might be an useful, routinely applicable tool to identify patients benefiting from perioperative platinum-based chemotherapy and checkpoint inhibitor therapy. However, external validation of our data is required.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urolonc.2021.07.025DOI Listing

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