Chemotherapy markedly reduces B cells but not T cells and NK cells in patients with cancer:
Abstract
Chemotherapy is still the backbone of systemic treatment in the majority of cancers. However, immunotherapies, especially those based on checkpoint inhibition, are additional therapy options for many. For this, functional T cells are a mandatory requirement. The aim of this prospective study was to investigate the influence of chemotherapy on the cellular immune status of individual patients. Peripheral blood samples of 26 patients with solid malignancies undergoing chemotherapy were analyzed for lymphocyte populations and their subsets in a longitudinal approach. Chemotherapy decreased total B lymphocyte counts [median value (25–75 percentile): before chemotherapy 76/µl (39–160) vs. after chemotherapy 49/µl (24–106);
p = 0.001]. Among B cells, specific subsets decreased particularly [naïve B cells (49/µl (21–111) vs. 25/µl (13–56);
p = 0.001], memory B cells [3/µl (2–8) vs. 2/µl (1–4);
p = 0.001], and class-switched B cells [11/µl (6–20) vs. 6/µl (3–12);
p = 0.011]. In contrast, chemotherapy had no influence on the total numbers of CD4 + and CD8 + T lymphocytes or on their subsets (T helper cells 1, 2, and 17 as well as cytotoxic T cells in early, intermediate, late, terminal effector and exhausted status as well as both T-cell types with naïve, center memory, effector memory, activated, or regulatory phenotype). Furthermore, the count of natural killer (NK) lymphocytes showed no significant change before and after chemotherapy. In summary, this study shows a decrease of B lymphocytes during systemic chemotherapy, but no relevant effect on T lymphocytes, NK lymphocytes and their subsets. This could support the idea of an effective additive T-cell-dependent immunotherapy to chemotherapy.
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