21 research outputs found
Professional Exposure to Goats Increases the Risk of Pneumonic-Type Lung Adenocarcinoma: Results of the IFCT-0504-Epidemio Study
Pneumonic-type lung adenocarcinoma (P-ADC) represents a distinct subset of lung cancer with specific clinical, radiological, and pathological features. Given the weak association with tobacco-smoking and the striking similarities with jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV)-induced ovine pulmonary adenocarcinoma, it has been suggested that a zoonotic viral agent infecting pulmonary cells may predispose to P-ADC in humans. Our objective was to explore whether exposure to domestic small ruminants may represent a risk factor for P-ADC. We performed a multicenter case-control study recruiting patients with P-ADC as cases and patients with non-P-ADC non-small cell lung cancer as controls. A dedicated 356-item questionnaire was built to evaluate exposure to livestock. A total of 44 cases and 132 controls were included. At multivariate analysis, P-ADC was significantly more associated with female gender (Odds-ratio (OR) = 3.23, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.32–7.87, p = 0.010), never- smoker status (OR = 3.57, 95% CI: 1.27–10.00, p = 0.015), personal history of extra-thoracic cancer before P-ADC diagnosis (OR = 3.43, 95% CI: 1.10–10.72, p = 0.034), and professional exposure to goats (OR = 5.09, 95% CI: 1.05–24.69, p = 0.043), as compared to other subtypes of lung cancer. This case-control suggests a link between professional exposure to goats and P-ADC, and prompts for further epidemiological evaluation of potential environmental risk factors for P-ADC
Long-term survival in patients with non-small cell lung cancer and synchronous brain metastasis treated with whole-brain radiotherapy and thoracic chemoradiation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Brain metastases occur in 30-50% of Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients and confer a worse prognosis and quality of life. These patients are usually treated with Whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) followed by systemic therapy. Few studies have evaluated the role of chemoradiotherapy to the primary tumor after WBRT as definitive treatment in the management of these patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We reviewed the outcome of 30 patients with primary NSCLC and brain metastasis at diagnosis without evidence of other metastatic sites. Patients were treated with WBRT and after induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin for two cycles. In the absence of progression, concurrent chemoradiotherapy for the primary tumor with weekly paclitaxel and carboplatin was indicated, with a total effective dose of 60 Gy. If disease progression was ruled out, four chemotherapy cycles followed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Median Progression-free survival (PFS) and Overall survival (OS) were 8.43 ± 1.5 and 31.8 ± 15.8 months, respectively. PFS was 39.5% at 1 year and 24.7% at 2 years. The 1- and 2-year OS rates were 71.1 and 60.2%, respectively. Three-year OS was significantly superior for patients with N0-N1 stage disease vs. N2-N3 (60 vs. 24%, respectively; Response rate [RR], 0.03; <it>p</it>= 0.038).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Patients with NSCLC and brain metastasis might benefit from treatment with WBRT and concurrent thoracic chemoradiotherapy. The subgroup of N0-N1 patients appears to achieve the greatest benefit. The result of this study warrants a prospective trial to confirm the benefit of this treatment.</p
Sleeve lobectomy in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer: a report from the European Society of Thoracic Surgery database 2021.
For centrally located lung tumours, sleeve lobectomy is preferred over pneumectomy. We report on the surgical practices and perioperative outcomes of sleeve resections based on data from the European Society of Thoracic Surgeons database.
We retrieved data of patients undergoing sleeve lobectomy or bilobectomy from 2007 to 2021. We evaluated baseline characteristics, surgical approach, neoadjuvant treatments, morbidity and postoperative outcomes of open and video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) procedures.
In total, 1652 patients (median age: 63 years; females/males: 446/1206) underwent sleeve lobectomy (n = 1536) or bilobectomy (n = 116) by open thoracotomy (n = 1491; 90.2%) or VATS (n = 161; 9.8%) with a thoracotomy conversion rate of 21.1% (n = 34); 398 (24.1%) patients received neoadjuvant treatment. Overall morbidity and 30-day mortality were 40.6% and 2.2%, respectively. Bronchial anastomotic complications occurred in 29 patients (1.8%) with conservative treatment in 6 cases (20.7%) and operative management in 23 (79.3%). On multivariable analysis, factors related to the elevated risk of cardiopulmonary complications were body mass index &lt; 20 [odds ratio (OR): 2.26; P &lt; 0.001] and bilobectomy (OR : 2.28, P &lt; 0.001). Age &lt;60 years (OR: 0.71, P = 0.013), female sex (OR: 0.54, P &lt; 0.001) and VATS (0.64, P &lt; 0.001) were associated with decreased risk. Neoadjuvant treatment was not associated with increased risks of cardiopulmonary complications (OR: 1.05; P = 0.664). Compared to open thoracotomy, VATS was associated with significantly decreased overall morbidity (30.4% vs 41.7%, P = 0.006) and length of stay (median: 5 days vs 8 days; P &lt; 0.001).
Sleeve lobectomies can be safely performed after neoadjuvant treatment. The VATS approach fosters shorter length of stay and decreased morbidity
Analysis of the Single-Cell Heterogeneity of Adenocarcinoma Cell Lines and the Investigation of Intratumor Heterogeneity Reveals the Expression of Transmembrane Protein 45A (TMEM45A) in Lung Adenocarcinoma Cancer Patients
Intratumoral heterogeneity (ITH) is responsible for the majority of difficulties encountered in the treatment of lung-cancer patients. Therefore, the heterogeneity of NSCLC cell lines and primary lung adenocarcinoma was investigated by single-cell mass cytometry (CyTOF). First, we studied the single-cell heterogeneity of frequent NSCLC adenocarcinoma models, such as A549, H1975, and H1650. The intra- and inter-cell-line single-cell heterogeneity is represented in the expression patterns of 13 markers—namely GLUT1, MCT4, CA9, TMEM45A, CD66, CD274 (PD-L1), CD24, CD326 (EpCAM), pan-keratin, TRA-1-60, galectin-3, galectin-1, and EGFR. The qRT-PCR and CyTOF analyses revealed that a hypoxic microenvironment and altered metabolism may influence cell-line heterogeneity. Additionally, human primary lung adenocarcinoma and non-involved healthy lung tissue biopsies were homogenized to prepare a single-cell suspension for CyTOF analysis. The CyTOF showed the ITH of human primary lung adenocarcinoma for 14 markers; particularly, the higher expressions of GLUT1, MCT4, CA9, TMEM45A, and CD66 were associated with the lung-tumor tissue. Our single-cell results are the first to demonstrate TMEM45A expression in human lung adenocarcinoma, which was verified by immunohistochemistry
DataSheet_3_Single-cell mass cytometric analysis of peripheral immunity and multiplex plasma marker profiling of non-small cell lung cancer patients receiving PD-1 targeting immune checkpoint inhibitors in comparison with platinum-based chemotherapy.pdf
IntroductionThe effect of platinum-based chemotherapy (Chem.) and second- or multiple- line immune checkpoint PD-1 blocking therapy by Nivolumab or Pembrolizumab (ICI) was assayed in the peripheral blood of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients.MethodsFlow cytometry was used to detect NSCLC-related antigen binding IgG antibodies. The Luminex MagPix multiplex bead-based cytokine/chemokine detecting system was used to quantitatively measure 17 soluble markers in the plasma samples. Single-cell mass cytometry was applied for the immunophenotyping of peripheral leukocytes.ResultsThe incubation of patient derived plasma with human NSCLC tumor cell lines, such as A549, H1975, and H1650, detected NSCLC-specific antibodies reaching a maximum of up to 32% reactive IgG-positive NSCLC cells. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of Chem. group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: BTLA, CD27, CD28, CD40, CD80, CD86, GITRL, ICOS, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of ICI group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: CD27, CD28, CD40, GITRL, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. We showed the induction of CD69 and IL-2R on CD4+ CD25+ T-cells upon chemotherapy; the exhaustion of one CD8+ T-cell population was detected by the loss of CD127 and a decrease in CD27. CD19+CD20+, CD79B+, or activated B-cell subtypes showed CD69 increase and downregulation of BTLA, CD27, and IL-2R in NSCLC patients following chemotherapy or ICI.DiscussionPeripheral immunophenotype caused by chemotherapy or PD-1 blocking was shown in the context of advanced NSCLC.</p
DataSheet_1_Single-cell mass cytometric analysis of peripheral immunity and multiplex plasma marker profiling of non-small cell lung cancer patients receiving PD-1 targeting immune checkpoint inhibitors in comparison with platinum-based chemotherapy.docx
IntroductionThe effect of platinum-based chemotherapy (Chem.) and second- or multiple- line immune checkpoint PD-1 blocking therapy by Nivolumab or Pembrolizumab (ICI) was assayed in the peripheral blood of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients.MethodsFlow cytometry was used to detect NSCLC-related antigen binding IgG antibodies. The Luminex MagPix multiplex bead-based cytokine/chemokine detecting system was used to quantitatively measure 17 soluble markers in the plasma samples. Single-cell mass cytometry was applied for the immunophenotyping of peripheral leukocytes.ResultsThe incubation of patient derived plasma with human NSCLC tumor cell lines, such as A549, H1975, and H1650, detected NSCLC-specific antibodies reaching a maximum of up to 32% reactive IgG-positive NSCLC cells. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of Chem. group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: BTLA, CD27, CD28, CD40, CD80, CD86, GITRL, ICOS, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of ICI group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: CD27, CD28, CD40, GITRL, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. We showed the induction of CD69 and IL-2R on CD4+ CD25+ T-cells upon chemotherapy; the exhaustion of one CD8+ T-cell population was detected by the loss of CD127 and a decrease in CD27. CD19+CD20+, CD79B+, or activated B-cell subtypes showed CD69 increase and downregulation of BTLA, CD27, and IL-2R in NSCLC patients following chemotherapy or ICI.DiscussionPeripheral immunophenotype caused by chemotherapy or PD-1 blocking was shown in the context of advanced NSCLC.</p
DataSheet_2_Single-cell mass cytometric analysis of peripheral immunity and multiplex plasma marker profiling of non-small cell lung cancer patients receiving PD-1 targeting immune checkpoint inhibitors in comparison with platinum-based chemotherapy.xlsx
IntroductionThe effect of platinum-based chemotherapy (Chem.) and second- or multiple- line immune checkpoint PD-1 blocking therapy by Nivolumab or Pembrolizumab (ICI) was assayed in the peripheral blood of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients.MethodsFlow cytometry was used to detect NSCLC-related antigen binding IgG antibodies. The Luminex MagPix multiplex bead-based cytokine/chemokine detecting system was used to quantitatively measure 17 soluble markers in the plasma samples. Single-cell mass cytometry was applied for the immunophenotyping of peripheral leukocytes.ResultsThe incubation of patient derived plasma with human NSCLC tumor cell lines, such as A549, H1975, and H1650, detected NSCLC-specific antibodies reaching a maximum of up to 32% reactive IgG-positive NSCLC cells. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of Chem. group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: BTLA, CD27, CD28, CD40, CD80, CD86, GITRL, ICOS, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. The following markers were detected in significantly higher concentration in the plasma of ICI group versus healthy non-smoker and smoker controls: CD27, CD28, CD40, GITRL, LAG-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and TLR-2. We showed the induction of CD69 and IL-2R on CD4+ CD25+ T-cells upon chemotherapy; the exhaustion of one CD8+ T-cell population was detected by the loss of CD127 and a decrease in CD27. CD19+CD20+, CD79B+, or activated B-cell subtypes showed CD69 increase and downregulation of BTLA, CD27, and IL-2R in NSCLC patients following chemotherapy or ICI.DiscussionPeripheral immunophenotype caused by chemotherapy or PD-1 blocking was shown in the context of advanced NSCLC.</p