Assessment of the Circulating PD-1 and PD-L1 Levels and P53 Expression as a Predictor of Relapse in Pediatric Patients with Wilms Tumor and Hypernephroma
Heba A. Sahyon, Nadaa S. Alharbi, Zummar Asad, Mohamed A. El Shishtawy, Safaa A. Derbala

TL;DR
This study explores how levels of PD-1, PD-L1, and P53 in blood can predict relapse in children with Wilms tumor and hypernephroma.
Contribution
The study introduces a non-invasive method using circulating PD-L1 and P53 levels to predict relapse in pediatric renal tumors.
Findings
Relapsed patients showed increased circulating PD-L1 levels before and after chemotherapy.
P53 expression significantly decreased after one year of chemotherapy in relapsed patients.
Circulating PD-L1 can serve as a reliable predictor of tumor relapse.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Wilms tumor (WT) is the most common form of pediatric renal tumor, accounting for over 90% of cases followed by hypernephroma. Some pediatric patients with WT (10%) experience relapse or metastasis and have poor survival rates. PD-L1 assists cancer cells in escaping damage from the immune system. P53 mutations are found in relapsed WT tumor samples. We hypothesized that testing circulating PD-1 and PD-L1 and P53 expression levels could offer a simple method to predict patient relapse and explore novel treatments for pediatric WTs and hypernephroma. Methods: Flow cytometric detection of cPD-1, cPD-L1, and P53 expression in relapsed and in-remission WT and hypernephroma before and after one year of chemotherapy was performed. Results: Our data shows increased levels of cPD-L1 in relapsed pediatric patients with WT or hypernephroma before and after chemotherapy.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal and related cancers · Renal cell carcinoma treatment · Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life
