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Background Transarterial embolization (TAE) is the most common treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC); however, there remain limited data describing the influence of TAE on the tumor immune microenvironment. Purpose To characterize TAE-induced modulation of the tumor immune microenvironment in a rat model of HCC and identify factors that modulate this response. Materials and Methods TAE was performed on autochthonous HCCs induced in rats with use of diethylnitrosamine. CD3, CD4, CD8, and FOXP3 lymphocytes, as well as programmed cell death protein ligand-1 (PD-L1) expression, were examined in three cohorts: tumors from rats that did not undergo embolization (control), embolized tumors (target), and nonembolized tumors from rats that had a different target tumor embolized (nontarget). Differences in immune cell recruitment associated with embolic agent type (tris-acryl gelatin microspheres TAGM vs hydrogel embolics) and vascular location were examined in rat and human tissues. A generalized estimating equation model and t, Mann-Whitney U, and χ2 tests were used to compare groups. Results Cirrhosis-induced alterations in CD8, CD4, and CD25/CD4 lymphocytes were partially normalized following TAE (CD8: 38.4%, CD4: 57.6%, and CD25/CD4: 21.1% in embolized liver vs 47.7% P = .02, 47.0% P = .01, and 34.9% P = .03, respectively, in cirrhotic liver 36.1%, 59.6%, and 4.6% in normal liver). Embolized tumors had a greater number of CD3, CD4, and CD8 tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes relative to controls (191.4 cells/mm2 vs 106.7 cells/mm2 P = .03; 127.8 cells/mm2 vs 53.8 cells/mm2 P 2 vs 78.3 cells/mm2 [P = .01) as well as a higher PD-L1 expression score (4.1 au vs 1.9 au P P = .003; 3.7 vs 2.0 P = .01; and 2.2 vs 1.1 P = .03, respectively). The number of lymphocytes adjacent to embolics differed based on vascular location (17.9 extravascular CD68+ peri-TAGM cells vs 7.0 intravascular [P + peri-hydrogel embolic cells vs 3.4 intravascular [P Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorials by Kennedy et al and by White in this issue.
Tischfield et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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