Chemotherapy to induce T-cell subpopulation changes in advanced breast cancer patients.
2017
e12562Background: Recent data suggest that some anti-cancer agents may generate a stimulation of the immune system that can account for additional clinical responses. In breast cancer (BC) the immunomodulation via chemotherapy (CT) opens possible clinical applications, but: a) the variability in the immune response requires a careful pt selection and b) monitoring immunocompetence in clinical routine still represents a technical challenge.Changes in sub-populations of cytotoxic (CD8+) T-cells (as reported in aging) are not well documented in cancer pts. Methods: We utilized multi-color immunophenotyping by flow cytometry (FCM) using a high-resolution whole-blood assay in 39 pts (median age 53; 34 - 74 yrs) with advanced BC undergoing first-line, standard-dose anthracycline/taxane-based CT and in 12 older healthy women, during a 6-months study, to analyze variations in CD8+ T-cells and the effects of CT on different T-cell sub-populations. Results: In all BC pts there was a consistent decrease in absolute ...
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