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What do we have to know about pd-l1 expression in prostate cancer? A systematic literature review. part 7: Pd-l1 expression in liquid biopsy

Authors :
Andrea Palicelli
Martina Bonacini
Stefania Croci
Alessandra Bisagni
Eleonora Zanetti
Dario De Biase
Francesca Sanguedolce
Moira Ragazzi
Magda Zanelli
Alcides Chaux
Sofia Cañete-Portillo
Maria Paola Bonasoni
Stefano Ascani
Antonio De Leo
Jatin Gandhi
Alessandro Tafuni
Beatrice Melli
Palicelli A.
Bonacini M.
Croci S.
Bisagni A.
Zanetti E.
de Biase D.
Sanguedolce F.
Ragazzi M.
Zanelli M.
Chaux A.
Canete-Portillo S.
Bonasoni M.P.
Ascani S.
De Leo A.
Gandhi J.
Tafuni A.
Melli B.
Source :
Journal of Personalized Medicine, Journal of Personalized Medicine, Vol 11, Iss 1312, p 1312 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Liquid biopsy is an accessible, non-invasive diagnostic tool for advanced prostate cancer (PC) patients, potentially representing a real-time monitoring test for tumor evolution and response to treatment through the analysis of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and exosomes. We performed a systematic literature review (PRISMA guidelines) to describe the current knowledge about PD-L1 expression in liquid biopsies of PC patients: 101/159 (64%) cases revealed a variable number of PD-L1+ CTCs. Outcome correlations should be investigated in larger series. Nuclear PD-L1 expression by CTCs was occasionally associated with worse prognosis. Treatment (abiraterone, enzalutamide, radiotherapy, checkpoint-inhibitors) influenced PD-L1+ CTC levels. Discordance in PD-L1 status was detected between primary vs. metastatic PC tissue biopsies and CTCs vs. corresponding tumor tissues. PD-L1 is also released by PC cells through soluble exosomes, which could inhibit the T cell function, causing immune evasion. PD-L1+ PC-CTC monitoring and genomic profiling may better characterize the ongoing aggressive PC forms compared to PD-L1 evaluation on primary tumor biopsies/prostatectomy specimens (sometimes sampled a long time before recurrence/progression). Myeloid-derived suppressor cells and dendritic cells (DCs), which may have immune-suppressive effects in tumor microenvironment, have been found in PC patients circulation, sometimes expressing PD-L1. Occasionally, their levels correlated to clinical outcome. Enzalutamide-progressing castration-resistant PC patients revealed increased PD-1+ T cells and circulating PD-L1/2+ DCs.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Personalized Medicine, Journal of Personalized Medicine, Vol 11, Iss 1312, p 1312 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b19f1c4c9914f0587a5ae863c25da961