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Spatial heterogeneity of T cell repertoire across NSCLC tumors, tumor edges, adjacent and distant lung tissues.

BACKGROUND: A better understanding of T cells in lung cancer and their distribution across tumor-adjacent lungs and peripheral blood is needed to improve efficacy and minimize toxicity from immunotherapy to lung cancer patients.

METHODS: Here, we performed CDR3β TCR sequencing of 136 samples from 20 patients with early-stage NSCLC including peripheral blood mononuclear cells, tumors, tumor edges (<1 cm from tumor), as well as adjacent lungs 1 cm, 2 cm, 5 cm, and 10 cm away from the tumor to gain insight into the spatial heterogeneity of T cells across the lungs in patients with NSCLC. PD-L1, CD4, and CD8 expression was assessed using immunohistochemical staining, and genomic features were derived by targeted sequencing of 1,021 cancer-related genes. Multiplex immunohistochemistry against PD-1, CTLA4, LAG3, and TIM3 was performed on four patients to assess T cell exhaustion.

RESULTS: Our study reveals a decreasing gradient in TIL Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes homology with tumor edge, adjacent lungs, and peripheral blood but no discernible distance-associated patterns of T cell trafficking within the adjacent lung itself. Furthermore, we show a decrease in pathogen-specific TCRs in regions with high T cell clonality and PD-L1 expression.

CONCLUSIONS: Exclusion in T exhaustion cells at play across the lungs of patients with NSCLC may potentially be the mechanism for lung cancer occurrence.

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