Myeloid cells offer new lead for immunotherapy in liver cancer

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A joint study by UMC Utrecht and the Princess Máxima Center reveals that myeloid cells in pediatric liver tumors could pave the way for new targeted immunotherapy treatments.

The most common type of liver cancer in children, hepatoblastoma, surprisingly appears to contain many immune cells from a type that has long been overlooked. This is according to a study by researchers at the Princess Máxima Center and UMC Utrecht. The discovery of these myeloid cells in liver tumors unveils new avenues for immunotherapies. 

Hepatoblastoma is the most common type of liver cancer in children. It develops when immature liver cells remain stuck in an early stage of development and start dividing uncontrollably. Treatment usually consists of a combination of chemotherapy and surgery to remove the tumor, and sometimes even a liver transplant is necessary. Research into new therapies for childhood cancer therefore remains urgently needed. 

Immunotherapy

Until now, very little was known about the presence of immune cells in hepatoblastoma. This knowledge could be a starting point for possible treatments: the right medicine could stimulate the body’s own immune cells to recognize and attack the tumor. This approach, known as immunotherapy, is already used for various types of cancer, especially in adults.  

Researchers at UMC Utrecht and the Princess Máxima Center therefore started a research project to map the immune cells present in hepatoblastoma. To explore whether immunotherapy could be  a treatment option for children with hepatoblastoma, Yvonne Vercoulen, group leader at UMC Utrecht, and Weng Chuan Peng, research group leader at the Princess Máxima Center, started a collaboration. They published their findings in the journal Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy.

Few T cells

‘Our research shows that childhood liver tumors contain few so-called T cells, immune cells that are found in tumors in adults,’ says Daniëlle Krijgsman, researcher at the UMC Utrecht. ‘This means we cannot treat hepatoblastomas in children with immunotherapies based on activating these T cells, which is often done in adults with cancer.’

The researchers came to this conclusion by examining biopsies, pieces of tumor tissue, of children presently or previously under treatment in the Máxima Center, using spatial omics. This provides a very detailed picture of the tumor. ‘This technique allows us to learn much more about the types of immune cells present in the tumor,’ says Krijgsman. ‘We can see what kind of cells they are and exactly where they are located in the tumor.’

New treatment

By combining the clinical expertise of the Princess Máxima Center and the UMC Groningen with the work of both research groups, the team discovered another type of cell in children’s liver tumors: so-called myeloid cells. Like T cells, these cells can also be activated to clear other cells. This makes them a potential target for new therapies.  

In addition, the researchers observed that chemotherapy treatment might further increase the number of myeloid cells in liver tumors. ‘In the future, we could therefore consider combination therapy,’ says Stephanie Schubert, post doc researcher at the Princess Máxima Center. ‘We would first treat patients with chemotherapy to direct more immune cells to the tumor, after which we could activate those cells with immunotherapy.’

Collaboration

However, much research is still needed before a new type of therapy based on myeloid cells can be developed. ‘The field of immunotherapy still focuses primarily on T cells,’ says Schubert. ‘Research is already underway in adults on the safety and effectiveness of immunotherapy based on myeloid cells. I think we can expect a lot in this area in the coming years.’

UMC Utrecht and the Princess Máxima Center are working closely together to map the immune profile of childhood tumors, both teams having their own expertise – spatial omics in the team of Vercoulen, and molecular characterization of hepatoblastoma in Peng’s team. ‘It is important to know whether we can expect existing therapies to also work in childhood cancer,’ says Schubert. ‘And if there are differences, that provides starting points for further research into new therapies.’

This research was made possible thanks to a Boost Grant from the Cancer Research Center at UMC Utrecht, TKI-Health Holland (TumMyTOF), the Children Cancer-Free Foundation (KiKa), and the Kus van Kiki Foundation via the Princess Máxima Center Foundation. 

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