Abstract Our team has demonstrated that lymphatic exudate collected via surgical drains (“lymph”) is a proximal biofluid rich in ctDNA and prognostic of recurrence in HPV-independent Head and Neck Cancer (HPV- HNSCC). Other analytes such as proteins, metabolites, and cells are also abundant in lymph. To understand the liquid tumor microenvironment (TME) immediately after tumor resection, we characterized lymph at 24 hrs in HNSCC. We performed a multi-omic survey, demonstrating that lymph is distinct from plasma and represents a largely unexplored source of biomarkers relevant to immune modulation and metastasis.Metabolomics and proteomics were run on lymph supernatant and plasma. Proteomic screening was performed via Olink and normalized to internal standards for quantitative analysis. Metabolomic samples were assayed via LC-MS and normalized. 16s libraries were sequenced utilizing Illumina and analyzed in QIIME. 16s sequencing on 6 patients indicated an array of bacterial genera present in post-surgical lymph with consistency across patients. The distribution consisted primarily of microbes native to the oral cavity, suggesting post-surgical lymph may reflect the native microbiome prior to surgery. Pathogenic blooms were observed in a subset of patients. Ongoing analysis will correlate microbiome data with both cancer and surgical outcomes.Metabolite profiling was performed on post-surgical lymph and matched plasma from 4 patients, including 3 who recurred within 1 year of surgery. The metabolite profile in lymph of all 4 patients was more diverse than plasma with higher metabolite abundance per mL. 13% of identified metabolites were 2-fold enriched in lymph. Lymph from recurred patients showed high levels of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, reported to be associated with metastasis. Post-surgical lymph has a unique and largely uncharted metabolome to mine for biomarkers associated with recurrence.Proteomes were compared between lymph and plasma from 44 HPV-HNSCC patients. This cohort consists of 25 recurred (REC) and 19 patients with no evidence of disease (NED) with 1 year of follow up. Lymph and plasma displayed highly non-overlapping protein repertoires. The mean absolute volcano score was 25.2, indicating a strong global difference between lymph and plasma. Lymph was significantly enriched in 91 proteins (p range 4.1e-47 to 0.037), many associated with inflammation. REC lymph was also enriched in inflammatory markers compared to NED, including IL-1a, TNF, and TSLP (p = 0.002, 0.015, 0.003, respectively), which have been implicated in cancer metastasis, invasion, and angiogenesis. Lymph hits were largely non-overlapping with plasma, indicating the opportunity for novel biomarker discovery in this fluid.Analysis of the microbiome, metabolome, and proteome of post-surgical lymph reveals a rich and differentiated tumor-adjacent biofluid to study biomarkers relevant to metastasis and the TME. Citation Format: Zachary Costliow, Seka Lazare, Zhuosheng Gu, Adam Harmon, Maciej Pacula, Megan Rivera, Aadel A. Chaudhuri, Jose P. Zevallos, Jessalyn Marie Ubellacker, Wendy Winckler. Multi-omicsinpostoperative lymphatic exudate in HPV-negative head and neck cancer abstract. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2026; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2026 Apr 17-22; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2026;86(7 Suppl):Abstract nr 6137.
Costliow et al. (Fri,) studied this question.