Investigator

Ingrid Hedenfalk

Lund University

IHIngrid Hedenfalk
Papers(3)
Tertiary lymphoid str…Genomic alterations i…MET Expression and Ca…
Collaborators(10)
Jenny-Maria JönssonK SundfeldtLaura Martin de la Fu…Päivi KannistoSofia Westbom-FremerSrinivas VeerlaT ÖsterlundA LinderAnna MåsbäckB Ulfenborg
Institutions(4)
Lund UniversityUniversity of Gothenb…Skne University Hospi…University of Skövde

Papers

Tertiary lymphoid structures in high-grade serous tubo-ovarian carcinoma: anatomical site matters

Abstract Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) in the tumor microenvironment are prognostically beneficial in many solid cancer types. Reports on TLS in high-grade serous tubo-ovarian carcinoma (HGSC) are few, and the prognostic impact is unclear. We investigated mature TLS (mTLS), immature TLS (iTLS) and lymphoid aggregates (LA) in primary adnexal tumors (PTs) and synchronous omental/peritoneal metastases (pMets) of HGSC. Whole H&E slides were scrutinized for mTLS and LA in a population-based cohort of 130 cases with stage III-IV HGSC. The immune cell tumor infiltration was evaluated with single chromogenic immunohistochemistry (IHC) on a tissue microarray (TMA) from the same cases. Selected whole slides (PT n = 11, pMet n = 10) of the cases most abundant in mTLS and LA were further investigated with multiplex IHC and immunofluorescence using digital image analysis (QuPath), to confirm TLS status and map the T and B lymphocyte subtypes. The results showed that mTLS were more common in pMets than in PTs but did not have an independent prognostic impact on overall or progression-free survival. The presence of mTLS correlated with intratumoral infiltration of CD8+ cytotoxic T cells, FOXP3+ regulatory T cells and PD-1+ lymphocytes in pMets only. Although overall mTLS cell composition was similar between PTs and pMets, the outer zones of mTLS in PTs were more immune cell-rich. In conclusion, our results indicate differences in TLS presence and cellular elements between primary adnexal tumors and synchronous peritoneal metastases, which are important to consider when conducting studies of the immune environment in HGSC.

Genomic alterations in ovarian endometriosis and subsequently diagnosed ovarian carcinoma

Abstract STUDY QUESTION Can the alleged association between ovarian endometriosis and ovarian carcinoma be substantiated by genetic analysis of endometriosis diagnosed prior to the onset of the carcinoma? SUMMARY ANSWER The data suggest that ovarian carcinoma does not originate from ovarian endometriosis with a cancer-like genetic profile; however, a common precursor is probable. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Endometriosis has been implicated as a precursor of ovarian carcinoma based on epidemiologic studies and the discovery of common driver mutations in synchronous disease at the time of surgery. Endometrioid ovarian carcinoma and clear cell ovarian carcinoma are the most common endometriosis-associated ovarian carcinomas (EAOCs). STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION The pathology biobanks of two university hospitals in Sweden were scrutinized to identify women with surgically removed endometrioma who subsequently developed ovarian carcinoma (1998–2016). Only 45 archival cases with EAOC and previous endometriosis were identified and after a careful pathology review, 25 cases were excluded due to reclassification into non-EAOC (n = 9) or because ovarian endometriosis could not be confirmed (n = 16). Further cases were excluded due to insufficient endometriosis tissue or poor DNA quality in either the endometriosis, carcinoma, or normal tissue (n = 9). Finally 11 cases had satisfactory DNA from all three locations and were eligible for further analysis. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS Epithelial cells were collected from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) sections by laser capture microdissection (endometrioma n = 11) or macrodissection (carcinoma n = 11) and DNA was extracted. Normal tissue from FFPE sections (n = 5) or blood samples collected at cancer diagnosis (n = 6) were used as the germline controls for each included patient. Whole-exome sequencing was performed (n = 33 samples). Somatic variants (single-nucleotide variants, indels, and copy number alterations) were characterized, and mutational signatures and kataegis were assessed. Microsatellite instability and mismatch repair status were confirmed with PCR and immunohistochemistry, respectively. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE The median age for endometriosis surgery was 42 years, and 54 years for the subsequent ovarian carcinoma diagnosis. The median time between the endometriosis and ovarian carcinoma was 10 (7–30) years. The data showed that all paired samples harbored one or more shared somatic mutations. Non-silent mutations in cancer-associated genes were frequent in endometriosis; however, the same mutations were never observed in subsequent carcinomas. The degree of clonal dominance, demonstrated by variant allele frequency, showed a positive correlation with the time to cancer diagnosis (Spearman’s rho 0.853, P < 0.001). Mutations in genes associated with immune escape were the most conserved between paired samples, and regions harboring these genes were frequently affected by copy number alterations in both sample types. Mutational burdens and mutation signatures suggested faulty DNA repair mechanisms in all cases. LARGE SCALE DATA Datasets are available in the supplementary tables. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Even though we located several thousands of surgically removed endometriomas between 1998 and 2016, only 45 paired samples were identified and even fewer, 11 cases, were eligible for sequencing. The observed high level of intra- and inter-heterogeneity in both groups (endometrioma and carcinoma) argues for further studies of the alleged genetic association. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS The observation of shared somatic mutations in all paired samples supports a common cellular origin for ovarian endometriosis and ovarian carcinoma. However, contradicting previous conclusions, our data suggest that cancer-associated mutations in endometriosis years prior to the carcinoma were not directly associated with the malignant transformation. Rather, a resilient ovarian endometriosis may delay tumorigenesis. Furthermore, the data indicate that genetic alterations affecting the immune response are early and significant events. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) The present work has been funded by the Sjöberg Foundation (2021-01145 to K.S.; 2022-01-11:4 to A.S.), Swedish state under the agreement between the Swedish government and the county councils, the ALF-agreement (965552 to K.S.; 40615 to I.H.; 965065 to A.S.), Swedish Cancer Society (21-1848 to K.S.; 21-1684 to I.H.; 22-2080 to A.S.), BioCARE—A Strategic Research Area at Lund University (I.H. and S.W.-F.), Mrs Berta Kamprad’s Cancer Foundation (FBKS-2019-28, I.H.), Cancer and Allergy Foundation (10381, I.H.), Region Västra Götaland (A.S.), Sweden’s Innovation Agency (2020-04141, A.S.), Swedish Research Council (2021-01008, A.S.), Roche in collaboration with the Swedish Society of Gynecological Oncology (S.W.-F.), Assar Gabrielsson Foundation (FB19-86, C.M.), and the Lena Wäpplings Foundation (C.M.). A.S. declares stock ownership and is also a board member in Tulebovaasta, SiMSen Diagnostics, and Iscaff Pharma. A.S. has also received travel support from EMBL, Precision Medicine Forum, SLAS, and bioMCC. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

99Works
3Papers
10Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsPrognosisBreast NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorLymphocytes, Tumor-InfiltratingCystadenocarcinoma, SerousNeoplasm Grading

Positions

Researcher

Lund University

2021–

Professor

Lund University · Division of Oncology, Department of Clinical Sciences Lund

Education

2002

PhD

Lund University · Department of Oncology