Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Tsunedomi Ryouichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 1000361639
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Intratumoural-infiltrating CD4 + and FOXP3 + T cells as strong positive predictive markers for the prognosis of resectable colorectal cancer

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Taichi Kuwahara
Shoichi Hazama
Nobuaki Suzuki
Shin Yoshida
Shinobu Tomochika
Yuki Nakagami
Hiroto Matsui
Yoshitaro Shindo
Shinsuke Kanekiyo
Yukio Tokumitsu
Michihisa Iida
Ryouichi Tsunedomi
Shigeru Takeda
Shigefumi Yoshino
Naoko Okayama
Yutaka Suehiro
Takahiro Yamasaki
Tomonobu Fujita
Yutaka Kawakami
Tomio Ueno
Hiroaki Nagano

Summary

BACKGROUND: CD3 +  and CD8 + T-cell infiltration were reported as positive predictive markers of survival in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. Here, we demonstrate the prognostic significance of CD4 + and FOXP3 + T-cell densities in CRC. METHODS: We quantified the intratumoural densities of CD3 + , CD8 + , CD4 +  and FOXP3 + T cells by immunohistochemistry and digital pathology in 342 CRC patients who underwent curative resection. Microsatellite instability was also assessed in 322 specimens. Patient demographics, clinicopathological features and survival rates were analysed. RESULTS: High CD3 + , CD4 +  and FOXP3 + T-cell densities were associated with improved relapse-free survival (RFS); high CD8 + , CD4 +  and FOXP3 + T-cell densities were associated with improved disease-specific survival (DSS). Patients with low CD4 + and low FOXP3 + T-cell densities exhibited extremely poor prognoses. T stage, vascular/lymphatic invasion and CD4 + T-cell density were independent prognostic indicators for DSS. The distributions of CD4 + and FOXP3 + T-cell densities were not significantly different between the high microsatellite instability group and other groups, in contrast to those of CD3 + and CD8 + T-cell densities. CONCLUSIONS: Intratumoural CD4 + T-cell density and combined CD4 + and FOXP3 + T-cell densities were stronger prognostic indicators than other clinicopathological features. These results may facilitate the establishment of novel prognostic factors and therapeutic strategies for CRC.

Magazine(name)

British Journal of Cancer

Publisher

 

Volume

121

Number Of Pages

8

StartingPage

659

EndingPage

665

Date of Issue

2019-10

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1038/s41416-019-0559-6

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID