Loading…

Sex dimorphism and cancer immunotherapy: May pregnancy solve the puzzle?

In the immunoncology era, growing evidence has shown a clear sex dimorphism in antitumor immune response with a potential impact on outcomes upon immunecheckpoint blockade (ICI) in patients with cancer. Sex dimorphism could affect tumor microenvironment composition and systemic anticancer immunity;...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cancer treatment reviews 2023-12, Vol.121, p.102648-102648, Article 102648
Main Authors: Venanzi, Francesco Maria, Bini, Marta, Nuccio, Antonio, De Toma, Alessandro, Lambertini, Matteo, Ogliari, Francesca Rita, Oresti, Sara, Viganò, Maria Grazia, Brioschi, Elena, Polignano, Maggie, Naldini, Matteo Maria, Riva, Silvia, Ferrara, Michele, Fogale, Nicola, Damiano, Giuseppe, Russo, Vincenzo, Reni, Michele, Veronesi, Giulia, Foggetti, Giorgia, Conforti, Fabio, Bulotta, Alessandra, Ferrara, Roberto
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:In the immunoncology era, growing evidence has shown a clear sex dimorphism in antitumor immune response with a potential impact on outcomes upon immunecheckpoint blockade (ICI) in patients with cancer. Sex dimorphism could affect tumor microenvironment composition and systemic anticancer immunity; however, the modifications induced by sex are heterogeneous. From a clinical perspective, six metanalyses have explored the role of sex in cancer patients receiving ICI with conflicting results. Environmental and reproductive factors may further jeopardize the sex-related heterogeneity in anticancer immune response. In particular, pregnancy is characterized by orchestrated changes in the immune system, some of which could be long lasting. A persistence of memory T-cells with a potential fetal-antigen specificity has been reported both in human and mice, suggesting that a previous pregnancy may positively impact cancer development or response to ICI, in case of fetal-antigen sharing from tumor cells. On the other hand, a previous pregnancy may also be associated with a regulatory memory characterized by increased tolerance and anergy towards cancer-fetal common antigens. Finally, fetal-maternal microchimerism could represent an additional source of chronic exposure to fetal antigens and may have important immunological implications on cancer development and ICI activity. So far, the role of pregnancy dimorphism (nulliparous vs parous) in women and the impact of pregnancy-related variables remain largely underexplored in cancer patients. In this review, we summarize the evidence regarding sex and pregnancy dimorphism in the context of immune response and anticancer immunotherapy and advocate the importance of analyzing pregnancy variables on ICIs clinical trials.
ISSN:0305-7372
1532-1967
DOI:10.1016/j.ctrv.2023.102648