Purpose: Colorectal cancer infiltration by CD16(+) myeloid cells correlates with improved prognosis. We addressed mechanistic clues and gene and protein expression of cytokines potentially associated with macrophage polarization.
Experimental design: GM-CSF or M-CSF-stimulated peripheral blood CD14(+) cells from healthy donors were cocultured with colorectal cancer cells. Tumor cell proliferation was assessed by (3)H-thymidine incorporation. Expression of cytokine genes in colorectal cancer and autologous healthy mucosa was tested by quantitative, real-time PCR. A tumor microarray (TMA) including >1,200 colorectal cancer specimens was stained with GM-CSF- and M-CSF-specific antibodies. Clinicopathological features and overall survival were analyzed.
Results: GM-CSF induced CD16 expression in 66% ± 8% of monocytes, as compared with 28% ± 1% in cells stimulated by M-CSF (P = 0.011). GM-CSF but not M-CSF-stimulated macrophages significantly (P < 0.02) inhibited colorectal cancer cell proliferation. GM-CSF gene was expressed to significantly (n = 45, P < 0.0001) higher extents in colorectal cancer than in healthy mucosa, whereas M-CSF gene expression was similar in healthy mucosa and colorectal cancer. Accordingly, IL1β and IL23 genes, typically expressed by M1 macrophages, were expressed to significantly (P < 0.001) higher extents in colorectal cancer than in healthy mucosa. TMA staining revealed that GM-CSF production by tumor cells is associated with lower T stage (P = 0.02), "pushing" growth pattern (P = 0.004) and significantly (P = 0.0002) longer survival in mismatch-repair proficient colorectal cancer. Favorable prognostic effect of GM-CSF production by colorectal cancer cells was confirmed by multivariate analysis and was independent from CD16(+) and CD8(+) cell colorectal cancer infiltration. M-CSF expression had no significant prognostic relevance.
Conclusions: GM-CSF production by tumor cells is an independent favorable prognostic factor in colorectal cancer.
©2014 American Association for Cancer Research.