Predicting Survival in Follicular Lymphoma Using Tissue Microarrays

2007 ◽  
pp. 255-268
Author(s):  
Michael J. Korenberg ◽  
Pedro Farinha ◽  
Randy D. Gascoyne
Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2609-2609
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Clear ◽  
Abigail M. Lee ◽  
Kelly J. Morris ◽  
Maria Calaminici ◽  
Finlay Macdougall ◽  
...  

Abstract Micro-vessel density (MVD) is a powerful prognostic factor in cancers but its value in haematological malignancies is more controversial. To examine its prognostic value in follicular lymphoma (FL) we assessed number and distribution of blood vessels by high-throughput tissue microarray and automated image analysis measurements in tissue microarrays (TMA) of paraffin-embedded, diagnostic lymph node biopsies taken from fifty-nine FL patients. These patients were selected from those who died from lymphoma progression less than 5 years after diagnosis (short survivor group) (n=34) and those who survived more than 15 years from diagnosis (long survivor group) (n=25). Immunohistochemistry was used in TMAs to study the number and location of vessels staining positive for the endothelial cell markers CD31 and CD34 and pericyte coverage using PDGFR. Interactive quantification using image analysis software was used to provide details of absolute numbers of vessels from each patient, as well as vessel size and their location. Image stacks of immunofluorescence stained sections were obtained using laser-scanning confocal microscopy to trace the tumour vasculature. Results demonstrated that both total vessel count and mean vessel area were significantly different between the two groups. Samples from the long survivor group were significantly more likely to have fewer (p=0.025), but larger vessels (p=0.002) than those from the short surviving group. The differences in vessel size and number were more prominent in inter-follicular vessels compared with those inside the neoplastic follicles. The smaller and more numerous blood vessels seen in the poorer prognostic sub-group likely reflects active, sprouting angiogenesis as confirmed by confocal microscopy. This study validates the use of TMAs to examine angiogenesis and demonstrates the powerful prognostic value of assessing MVD in FL. These results suggest that sprouting angiogenesis represents a therapeutic target in this disease and ongoing studies are investigating the mechanisms contributing to alteration in angiogenesis in different prognostic subgroups in FL and in transformation of this disease. The prognostic significance of MVD assessment in TMA is currently being evaluated in a validation set of FL samples.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (24) ◽  
pp. 5053-5056 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Clear ◽  
Abigail M. Lee ◽  
Maria Calaminici ◽  
Alan G. Ramsay ◽  
Kelly J. Morris ◽  
...  

Abstract Follicular lymphoma has considerable clinical heterogeneity, and there is a need for easily quantifiable prognostic biomarkers. Microvessel density has been shown to be a useful prognostic factor based on numerical assessment of vessel numbers within histologic sections in some studies, but assessment of tumor neovascularization through angiogenic sprouting may be more relevant. We therefore examined the smallest vessels, single-staining structures measuring less than 30 μm2 in area, seen within histologic sections, and confirmed that they were neovascular angiogenic sprouts using extended focal imaging. Tissue microarrays composing diagnostic biopsies from patients at the extremes of survival of follicular lymphoma were analyzed with respect to numbers of these sprouts. This analysis revealed higher angiogenic activity in the poor prognostic group and demonstrated an association between increased sprouting and elevated numbers of infiltrating CD163+ macrophages within the immediate microenvironment surrounding the neovascular sprout.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 545-545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Csaba Böodöor ◽  
Grossmann Vera ◽  
Alexander Kohlmann ◽  
King Tan ◽  
Jessica Okosun ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 545 The tumor genetics of follicular lymphoma (FL) is unique in the field of cancer with almost all cases having one or more mutations in components of the epigenome. Our previous studies demonstrated that DNA hypermethylation occurs at 7% of loci in FL and these are specifically enriched for targets of the Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2). This complex includes the histone methyltransferase EZH2, responsible for transcriptional repression via trimethylation of lysine 27 on histone H3 (H3K27me3). This link between DNA and histone methylation was confirmed by identification of gain of function mutations in EZH2 (Morin et al, Nature Genetics 2010), which leads to elevated levels of H3K27me3. As EZH2 inhibitors are currently in development, we assessed EZH2 mutation status and H3K27me3 deregulation in a large series of 367 FL cases (238 diagnosis, 129 relapse) as a first step in determining which patients may be best suited to targeted EZH2/H3K27me3 therapies. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) was initially performed for all 27 EZH2 exons of 50 FL cases and this confirmed mutations at the 3 codons Y646, A682, and A692 previously reported (Morin et al, Nature 2011). Targeted resequencing was therefore restricted to these 3 codons and performed on whole tumor DNA from 367 FL cases by both conventional Sanger and NGS using the Roche 454 platform (at least 200-fold coverage). Sixty-three EZH2 mutations (17%) were detected using both approaches with 51 mutations targeting codon Y646, 7 mutations at codon A682 and 5 mutations at codon A692 at a mean mutation load of 29.8% (range: 4–61%). Critically, deep-sequencing enabled detection of an additional 43 mutations with an average mutational load of 10.2% (range: 2–31%) increasing the overall mutation rate to 29%. Multiple EZH2 mutations were detected in 6 cases; these typically had low mutation loads e.g. Case 1: Y646F (10%) and Y646N (5%); Case 2: Y646N (3.5%), Y646S (4.5%) and A692V (2%) and were present in both diagnostic and relapsed cases. There was no difference in the mutation frequency at diagnosis and relapse. Of note, we also detected additional rare novel heterozygous variants K634E and V679M within the SET domain, both of unknown significance. It is plausible that the reported mutation load may reflect variations in the contamination of tumor by infiltrating normal cells, or alternatively true genetic heterogeneity with EZH2 mutation confined to a minor population of tumor cells. We made use of our previously generated methylation data from 164 FL patients (115 wt; 49 mutated), to rank biopsies based on their similarity to benign lymph node controls as an estimate of tumor content. The majority of cases with low EZH2 mutation load corresponded to cases with low tumor burden in the biopsy sample, therefore representing genuine clonal events. However, there are also a small but significant number of cases where the mutations represent examples of genetic heterogeneity. This is also consistent with mutation profiling in this series where 7 EZH2 mutated cases with a low mutation load (12%) harbor clonal mutations in TNFRSF14, another gene frequently mutated in FL, suggesting that, at least in these cases, EZH2 is not a tumor initiating event, but acquired during the evolution of the disease We next performed immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays generated from a subset of 120 FL cases (86 wt; 34 mutated) to determine the suitability of H3K27me3 staining as a surrogate biomarker for EZH2 mutation. Overall, 45% of cases demonstrated high H3K27me3 levels that included both wild type and EZH2 mutated biopsy samples. This suggests that raised H3K27me3 levels are not restricted to mutated cases and therefore EZH2-directed treatments may also be a rational approach in certain populations of EZH2 wild type patients. In summary, our experiments demonstrate higher prevalence of EZH2 mutations in FL then previously reported and highlight some of the challenges faced in developing the appropriate companion diagnostics tools to parallel the testing of novel therapies targeting EZH2/H3K27me3. Disclosures: Kohlmann: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Gribben:Celgene: Honoraria. Haferlach:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Equity Ownership.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (31) ◽  
pp. 5052-5059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abigail M. Lee ◽  
Andrew J. Clear ◽  
Maria Calaminici ◽  
Andrew J. Davies ◽  
Suzanne Jordan ◽  
...  

Purpose To examine the immune microenvironment in diagnostic follicular lymphoma (FL) biopsies and evaluate its prognostic significance. Patients and Methods Immunohistochemistry was used to study numbers and location of cells staining positive for immune cell markers CD4, CD7, CD8, CD25, CD68, forkhead box protein P3 (FOXP3), T-cell intracellular antigen-1, and Granzyme B in tissue microarrays of paraffin-embedded, diagnostic lymph node biopsies taken from 59 FL patients who lived less than 5 years (short-survival group; n = 34) and more than 15 years (long-survival group; n = 25). Results CD4 and FOXP3 expression were significantly different between the two groups. Samples from the long-survival group were more likely than those from the short-survival group to have CD4+ staining cells and to have FOXP3-positive cells in a perifollicular location. Conclusion This study has identified differences in immune cell composition of the diagnostic FL lymph node immune microenvironment and these have the potential for use as prognostic biomarkers in a routine histopathology setting.


2007 ◽  
Vol 25 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8097-8097
Author(s):  
M. S. McGrath ◽  
L. Shagrun ◽  
A. Morris ◽  
C. Behler

8097 Background: Recent studies of follicular lymphoma have suggested that the presence of high levels of tumor associated macrophages (MO) conferred a poor prognosis. The current study evaluated large cell lymphomas for the presence of MOs and “proliferative MOs” (promacs), in HIV+ and HIV- LCL. Methods: Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues from patients with LCL (and controls) were obtained from the ACSR (URL: http://acsr.ucsf.edu ) and evaluated for expression of CD68 (MO), PCNA (proliferation) and HIVp24 via the use of 0.6mm section tissue microarrays (TMA). Survival data was also evaluated. Results: 64 cases of LCL were evaluated, 31 of which were HIV+ (33 cases were HIV-). HIV p24 staining was seen with 13 of the 31 HIV+ cases(42%) , with staining only in MOs. Promacs (CD68+/PCNA+MOs) were more frequent in cases of HIV+ LCL (median of 18) and HIV- LCL (median of 5), than normal lymph nodes and reactive tonsillar tissue (p<.001). In both HIV+ and HIV- cases of LCL, there was a trend towards shorter survival (p<0.07) with increased numbers of MOs and promacs; p24 reactivity was unrelated to survival. Conclusions: In this preliminary study of MOs in LCL, MO number per TMA core was significantly correlated with promac number in all cases of LCL (p<.001). HIV p24 localized to MOs in 42% of HIV+ LCL cases and was unrelated to survival. Increased promac numbers in cases of LCL correlated with decreased survival in all cases of LCL, but cases of HIV+LCL tended to demonstrate shorter survival than in cases of HIV- LCL. Of the latter group, higher numbers of macrophages (for example, greater than 46 macrophages/core) portend a worse prognosis, but this finding was not statistically significant in this preliminary study. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrizia Mondello ◽  
Angelo Fama ◽  
Melissa C. Larson ◽  
Andrew L. Feldman ◽  
Jose C. Villasboas ◽  
...  

AbstractDespite a characteristic indolent course, a substantial subset of follicular lymphoma (FL) patients has an early relapse with a poor outcome. Cells in the microenvironment may be a key contributor to treatment failure. We used a discovery and validation study design to identify microenvironmental determinants of early failure and then integrated these results into the FLIPI. In total, 496 newly diagnosed FL grade 1–3 A patients who were prospectively enrolled into the MER cohort from 2002 to 2012 were evaluated. Tissue microarrays were stained for CD4, CD8, FOXP3, CD32b, CD14, CD68, CD70, SIRP-α, TIM3, PD-1, and PD-L1. Early failure was defined as failing to achieve event-free survival at 24 months (EFS24) in immunochemotherapy-treated patients and EFS12 in all others. CyTOF and CODEX analysis were performed to characterize intratumoral immunophenotypes. Lack of intrafollicular CD4 expression was the only predictor of early failure that replicated with a pooled OR 2.37 (95%CI 1.48–3.79). We next developed a bio-clinical risk model (BioFLIPI), where lack of CD4 intrafollicular expression moved patients up one FLIPI risk group, adding a new fourth high-risk group. Compared with BioFLIPI score of 1, patients with a score of 2 (OR 2.17; 95% CI 1.08–4.69), 3 (OR 3.53; 95% CI 1.78–7.54), and 4 (OR 8.92; 95% CI 4.00–21.1) had increasing risk of early failure. The favorable intrafollicular CD4 T cells were identified as activated central memory T cells, whose prognostic value was independent from genetic features. In conclusion, lack of intrafollicular CD4 expression predicts early failure in FL and combined with FLIPI improves identification of high-risk patients; however, independent validation is warranted.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro Farinha ◽  
Abdulwahab Al-Tourah ◽  
Karamjit Gill ◽  
Richard Klasa ◽  
Joseph M. Connors ◽  
...  

Abstract Previous studies of follicular lymphoma (FL) patients treated heterogeneously have suggested that decreased numbers of regulatory T cells correlates with improved survival. We studied advanced-stage FL patients from a single institution phase 2 trial. All patients were treated uniformly with multiagent chemotherapy and radiation. Tissue microarrays were constructed using diagnostic biopsies available in 105 patients and stained with CD4, CD8, CD25, and forkhead/winged helix transcription factor 3 (FOXP3) antibodies. Both cell content and cell distribution were evaluated. For all antibodies, there were cases with a predominant intrafollicular or perifollicular localization of cells (follicular pattern) while others displayed a diffuse pattern. The median follow-up of living patients was 17.1 years. The International Prognostic Index score predicted overall survival (OS; P = .004) but not risk of transformation (RT). Cell content did not impact survival, while immunoarchitectural patterns of CD4/CD8 were significant for progression-free survival (PFS; P = .056), CD25 for both PFS and OS (P = .002 and P = .024, respectively), and FOXP3+ predicted PFS, OS, and RT (P = .001, P < .001 and p = .002, respectively). A Cox multivariate model showed both International Prognostic Index score and FOXP3+ pattern were independent predictors of OS (P = .008 and P < .001, respectively), while only FOXP3+ pattern predicted RT (P = .004). We conclude that FOXP3+ cell distribution significantly predicts survival and RT in FL.


1966 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kwittken
Keyword(s):  

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