Multiparameter flow cytometric and transcriptional analyis of CD20 positive T-cells in bone marrow in patients of multiple myeloma and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance
Barbara Forró, Béla Kajtár, Ágnes Lacza, László Kereskai, Livia Vida, Balázs Kőszegi, Péter Urbán, József Kun, Attila Gyenesei, Szabolcs Kosztolányi, Dániel Kehl, Pál Jáksó

TL;DR
This study explores CD20+ T-cells in bone marrow of patients with multiple myeloma and MGUS, finding they may contribute to both immune surveillance and tumor progression.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the functional role of CD20+ T-cells in multiple myeloma and MGUS through phenotypic and transcriptional analysis.
Findings
CD20+ T-cells are more common in MGUS and MM patients and show signs of anti-tumor activity.
These cells express markers of T-cell exhaustion, especially in samples with higher tumor burden.
Transcriptional differences suggest roles in both immune surveillance and tumor immune escape.
Abstract
CD20+ T-cells were described firstly in peripheral blood and later in bone marrow in patients with hematological tumors, and certain immune-mediated diseases. During our hematological diagnostic work, this peculiar subgroup of lymphocytes has been consistently observed associated with untreated monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) and myeloma (MM). Despite the expanding literature data, the exact function of CD20+ T cells remains unclear. We investigated the incidence of CD20+ T-cells in MGUS (n=27), and MM using a larger cohort (n=125) and compared it with control bone marrow samples (n=39). We examined their presence before and after treatment in 32 cases with flow cytometry. Comprehensive flow cytometric analysis included the examination of functional (T-cell activation, cytotoxic molecules and T-cell exhaustion) and maturation markers in a large number of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Myeloma Research and Treatments · Immune Cell Function and Interaction · Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
