Early recovery of leukocyte subsets is associated with favorable progression-free survival in patients with inoperable stage II/III NSCLC after multimodal treatment: a prospective explorative study
Thomas P. Hofer, Alexander E. Nieto, Lukas Käsmann, Carolyn J. Pelikan, Julian Taugner, Saloni Mathur, Chukwuka Eze, Claus Belka, Farkhad Manapov, Elfriede Noessner

TL;DR
Early recovery of certain white blood cell types after treatment for advanced lung cancer is linked to better survival outcomes.
Contribution
Identifies specific leukocyte recovery patterns as predictors of favorable progression-free survival in NSCLC patients.
Findings
Early increase in CD8+ T-cell counts after treatment is associated with better progression-free survival.
High variability in IL-6 levels correlates with poor progression-free survival.
Early recovery of lymphocyte counts after radiotherapy predicts favorable outcomes.
Abstract
We explored the dynamic changes of major leukocyte subsets during definitive treatment of patients with inoperable stage II/III NSCLC lung cancer and correlated it to survival to identify subpopulations associated with maximal patient benefit. We analyzed peripheral blood of 20 patients, either treated with thoracic radiotherapy (RT), concurrent chemo-radiotherapy (cCRT), or cCRT with additional immune-checkpoint inhibition therapy. Peripheral blood of 20 patients was collected at 9 timepoints before, during, and up to 1 year post treatment and analyzed by multi-color flow cytometry. Statistical analysis was conducted for leukocyte subpopulations, IL-6, progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). Increase of absolute lymphocyte counts (ALC) after the end of RT until 6 months thereafter was a predictor of PFS. Baseline lymphocyte counts showed no significant correlation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease Prognosis · Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers · Lung Cancer Research Studies
