Sex Differences in the Systemic and Local Immune Response of Pancreatic Cancer Patients

胰腺癌患者全身和局部免疫反应的性别差异

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作者:Azaz Ahmed, Sophia Köhler, Rosa Klotz, Nathalia Giese, Thilo Hackert, Christoph Springfeld, Dirk Jäger, Niels Halama

Background

Mounting evidence suggests that sex plays a critical role in various aspects of cancer such as immune responses. However, a male bias exists in human and non-human studies including immunotherapy trials. The role of sex on immune responses in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is unclear.

Conclusion

Systemic and local immune responses differ between sexes in PDA. Accordingly, sex-dependent differences need to be considered in human studies and for specific immunological interventions before clinical translation.

Methods

Here, tumor tissues (tumor and stroma separately) and corresponding blood samples from patients with PDA (n = 52) were systematically analyzed by immunohistochemistry and multiplex cytokine measurements and compared by sex.

Results

Females showed a stronger systemic immune response with higher levels of CXCL9, IL1B, IL6, IL10 and IL13. Additionally, more peripheral white blood cells were detected in females. In the microenvironment, males showed higher tumoral levels of CXCL12. No differences were detected in the stroma. Females showed a tendency towards an anti-tumoral immune cell profile. CXCL12 blockade indicated a differential microenvironmental effect by sex in an independent immunotherapy trial cohort of patients with PDA (one female, five males). The overall survival did not differ by sex in our cohort.

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