2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(618e) High-Dimensional Analysis of the Tumor Immune Microenvironment of Metaplastic Breast Carcinoma
Authors
Christine M. Yee - Presenter, University of Michigan
Syed M. Rizvi, University of Michigan
Luke F. Bugada, University of Michigan
Maria E. Gonzalez, University of Michigan
Celina G. Kleer, University of Michigan
Fei Wen, University of Michigan
Metaplastic breast carcinoma (MBC) is an aggressive variant of triple-negative breast cancer that has poorer prognosis and increased propensity for metastasis, compared to other triple-negative breast cancers. Common treatments for other breast cancers -- chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and hormonal therapy -- have been ineffective. Furthermore, MBC is rare, accounting for approximately 1% of breast carcinomas, and has limited molecular research. Thus, a deeper understanding of the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) to identify potential therapeutic targets is needed.
We leveraged imaging mass cytometry to investigate the TIME of three clinical subtypes of MBC. From the fixed tissue sections of 26 patients, we detected 35 markers on more than 160,000 cells, and identified 13 major tumor and immune cell types. Immune cells are differentially enriched in different MBC subtypes, representing potential targets for immunotherapy. Further spatial analysis revealed interesting immuneâimmune and immuneâtumor interactions that can affect immunotherapy efficacy. This highly multiplexed analysis provides a framework that can readily be applied to investigate the TIME of other solid tumors for therapeutic target discovery.