Tumor immune microenvironment of self-identified African American and non-African American triple negative breast cancer

Differences in the tumor immune microenvironment may result in differences in prognosis and response to treatment in cancer patients. We hypothesized that differences in the tumor immune microenvironment may exist between African American (AA) and NonAA patients, due to ancestry-related or socioecon...

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Veröffentlicht in:NPJ breast cancer 2022-07, Vol.8 (1), p.88-88, Article 88
Hauptverfasser: Marczyk, Michal, Qing, Tao, O’Meara, Tess, Yagahoobi, Vesal, Pelekanou, Vasiliki, Bai, Yalai, Reisenbichler, Emily, Cole, Kimberly S., Li, Xiaotong, Gunasekharan, Vignesh, Ibrahim, Eiman, Fanucci, Kristina, Wei, Wei, Rimm, David L., Pusztai, Lajos, Blenman, Kim R. M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Differences in the tumor immune microenvironment may result in differences in prognosis and response to treatment in cancer patients. We hypothesized that differences in the tumor immune microenvironment may exist between African American (AA) and NonAA patients, due to ancestry-related or socioeconomic factors, that may partially explain differences in clinical outcomes. We analyzed clinically matched triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) tissues from self-identified AA and NonAA patients and found that stromal TILs, PD-L1 IHC-positivity, mRNA expression of immune-related pathways, and immunotherapy response predictive signatures were significantly higher in AA samples ( p  
ISSN:2374-4677
2374-4677
DOI:10.1038/s41523-022-00449-3