Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center have discovered a unique immune gene signature that can predict the presence of microscopic lymph node-like structures in metastatic melanoma.
The presence of these immune structures, the researchers said, appears to be associated with better survival and may indicate the possibility of selecting patients for immunotherapy based solely on the immune-related makeup of their tumours as an approach to personalised medicine.
The study appears in Scientific Reports, a journal from Nature Publishing Group.
In this study, the researchers analysed a 12-chemokine gene expression signature across nearly 15,000 distinct solid tumors of different types, including metastatic melanoma.
Chemokines are powerful immune system molecules known to be important in lymph node formation and function during development.
The 12-chemokine gene expression signature was found to remarkably predict the presence of microscopic lymph node-like structures within some melanomas and was also associated with better overall survival of these patients.
The researchers speculate that the lymph nodal structures they identified are active and playing an important positive role in a self-elicited (endogenous) anti-tumour response – initially locally and then systemically. They also anticipate that their findings in melanoma may extend to other solid tumours, such as those of colorectal, lung and ovarian origin.
"We believe this gene expression signature reveals information on a unique anti-tumour response mechanism within the microenvironment of certain patient solid tumours, which may be their Achilles' heel to make them unusually responsive to immunotherapy and possibly lead to improved patient survival," explained the study's senior author, James J. Mulé, Ph.D., associate center director of Translational Research at Moffitt.
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