| Home > Articles > Published articles > Integrated phenotyping of the anti-cancer immune response in HIV-associated hepatocellular carcinoma |
| Date: | 2023 |
| Abstract: | HIV-seropositivity shortens survival in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Although risk factors for HCC including HCV infection can influence T cell phenotype, it is unknown whether HIV can influence functional characteristics of the T cell infiltrate. From the Liver Cancer in HIV biorepository, we derived 129 samples of transplanted (76%) or resected (20%) HCC in eight European and North American centres. We profiled intra- and peritumoural tissue to evaluate regulatory CD4+/FOXP3+ and immune-exhausted CD8+/PD1+ T cells in HIV+ (n = 66) and HIV- (n = 63) samples. We performed targeted transcriptomics and T-cell receptor sequencing in a restricted subset of samples evaluated in relationship with HIV status. We correlated immunopathologic features with patients' characteristics including markers of HIV infection. Of the 66 HIV+ patients, 83% were HCV coinfected with an undetectable HIV viral load (51%) and a median blood CD4+ cell count of 430 cells/mm 3 (range 15-908). Patients who were HIV+ were compared with HIV- controls with similar staging characteristics including Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) stage A-B (86% vs. 83%, p = 0. 16), <3 nodules (90% vs. 83%, p = 0. 3) and median alpha-foetoprotein values (10. 9 vs. 12. 8 ng/ml, p = 0. 72). HIV+ samples had higher PD-L1 expression rates in tumour tissue (51% vs. 8% p <0. 0001) and displayed denser intratumoural CD4+/FOXP3+ (p <0. 0001), CD8+/PD1+ (p <0. 0001), with lower total peritumoural CD4+ (p <0. 0001) and higher peritumoural CD8+/PD1+ (p <0. 0001). Gene set analysis revealed HIV+ cases to have evidence of dysregulated adaptive and innate immunity. Tumour-infiltrating lymphocyte clonality was not influenced by HIV status. HIV-associated HCC harbours a profoundly immune-exhausted tumour microenvironment, warranting prospective testing of immunotherapy in this treatment-deprived patient population. Hepatocellular carcinoma is a non-AIDS defining malignancy characterised by poor survival. The programmed cell death (PD-1) pathway governs antiviral and anticancer immune exhaustion and is a therapeutic target in HCC. This study highlights how HIV infection is associated with significantly higher PD-L1 expression in HCC cells and in the surrounding microenvironment, leading to changes in cytotoxic and regulatory T cell function and dysregulation of proinflammatory pathways. Taken together, our results suggest dysfunctional T cell immunity as a mechanism of worse outcome in these patients and suggest clinical testing of checkpoint inhibitors in HIV-associated HCC. |
| Grants: | Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI18/00542 Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI18/00961 Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI21/00714 |
| Rights: | Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. |
| Language: | Anglès |
| Document: | Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada |
| Subject: | HCC ; HIV ; PD-L1 ; Prognosis |
| Published in: | JHEP Reports, Vol. 5 (march 2023) , ISSN 2589-5559 |
12 p, 2.2 MB |