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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Impact of the tumor microenvironment on prognosis in follicular lymphoma is dependent on specific treatment protocols

TLDR
It is suggestive that a dense infiltrate of FoxP3-positive T cells, dense and interfollicular infiltrate of CD68-positive macrophages and complete follicular dendritic meshworks were associated with a favorable time to progression in CVP-treated patients, while being poor prognostic sign in fludarabine- treated patients.
Abstract
Background The clinical behavior of follicular lymphoma is largely determined by properties of the non-malignant tumor microenvironment. The precise nature of the cell populations is still unclear and published data on their prognostic significance are highly conflicting. This may be partly due to heterogeneous composition and tr eatments. Design and Methods Pre-treatment biopsy samples of patients with follicular lymphoma treated in an EORTC/BNLI trial comparing fludarabine to cyclophosphamide, vincristine and prednisone (CVP) chemotherapy could be retrieved for 61 patients in five Eur opean countries. Immunohistochemical investigations were performed to evaluate tumor cell characteristics, T-cell subsets, follicular dendritic cells and macrophages and associations with clinical outcome were studied. Results Some markers showed a homogeneous prognostic impact, while others had a different and sometimes opposite effect in the treatment arms. CD69 expression on tumor cells was a poor prognostic sign and an interfollicular infiltrate of FoxP3-positive T cells was a good prognostic sign irrespective of the treatment arm. It is suggestive that a dense infiltrate of FoxP3-positive T cells, a dense and interfollicular infiltrate of CD68-positive macr ophages and complete follicular dendritic meshworks were associated with a favorable time to progression in CVP-treated patients, while being a poor prognostic sign in fludarabine-treated patients. Conclusions Our results suggest that characteristic properties of the microenvironment in follicular lymphoma determines the responses to essentially different chemotherapeutic approaches. These data may provide an explanation for the highly conflicting r esults on immunohistochemical markers and the prognostic role of the microenvironment in follicular lymphoma reported thus far and lay the basis for the development of predictive assays to tailor treatment in patients with follicular lymphoma.

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High numbers of tumor-associated macrophages correlate with poor prognosis in patients with mature T- and natural killer cell lymphomas

TL;DR: It is shown that expression of stromal TAMs may become a useful marker for prognosis of mature T- and NK-cell lymphomas and in multivariate analysis, TAMs content remained an independent biological variable for survival distinct from the International Prognostic Index.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissecting follicular lymphoma: high versus low risk

TL;DR: Despite awareness of progressive genetic and epigenetic derangements and a growing appreciation of the microenvironment's role in FL outcomes, there is no validated means of incorporating biologic data into clinical prognostic indices and the current state of knowledge regarding risk stratification in FL is highlighted.
Journal Article

BCL6-translocations affect the phenotype of follicular lymphomas only in the absence of t(14;18)IgH/BCL2.

TL;DR: BCL2- and BCL6-translocations correlate with particular phenotypes of follicular lymphomas, and seem to affect the phenotype only when they are not accompanied by BCL3- or BCL4- translocations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathobiology and diagnosis of follicular lymphoma

TL;DR: Early lesions of follicular lymphoma can be identified using immunohistochemistry, which presents a challenge to diagnostic histopathologists, but can by contrast help to understand the pathogenesis of the disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lymphomas and Their Microenvironment: A Multifaceted Relationship

TL;DR: An outline on the importance of the microenvironment for tumors in general and lymphomas in particular is given, by highlighting certain basic principles of tumor-microenvironment interaction and the most important finding concerning lymphomas with a focus on immunomodulatory substances is highlighted.
References
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Journal Article

CD4+CD25+ T Cells Inhibit Both the Induction and Effector Function of Autoreactive T Cells and Represent a Unique Lineage of Immunoregulatory Cells

TL;DR: The population of CD4+CD25+ immunoregulatory cells is characterized and it is demonstrated that they can suppress not only the induction of disease post-thymectomy, but can also efficiently suppress disease induced by cloned autoantigen-specific effector cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of CD4+25+ T regulatory cell function implicated in enhanced immune response by low-dose cyclophosphamide

TL;DR: This is the first report demonstrating that CY, in addition to decreasing cell number, inhibits the suppressive capability of T(REGs), and the relevance of the loss of suppressor functionality and the changes in gene expression are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Follicular Lymphoma International Prognostic Index.

TL;DR: The Follicular Lymphoma International Prognostic Index was designed from the data recorded over 8 years of nearly 5000 patients registered worldwide to help provide an optimal treatment option for patients with follicular lymphoma.
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