@phdthesis{Wendlinger2023, author = {Wendlinger, Simone Alice}, title = {Function of Peripheral Blood Eosinophils in Melanoma}, publisher = {Cancers (Basel)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-30119}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-301194}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Despite accounting for only a small proportion of all skin cancers, malignant melanoma displays a serious health risk with increasing incidence and high mortality rate. Fortunately, advances in the treatment of malignant melanoma now prolong survival and enhance response and treatment efficacy. Established biomarkers help evaluate disease progression and facilitate choosing appropriate and individual treatment options. However, the need for easily accessible and reliable biomarkers is rising to predict patient-specific clinical outcome. Eosinophil infiltration into the tumor and high peripheral eosinophil counts prior and during treatment have been associated with better response in patients for various cancer entities, including melanoma. An analysis of a heterogeneous study cohort reported high serum ECP levels in non-responders. Hence, eosinophil frequency and serum ECP as a soluble eosinophil-secreted mediator were suggested as prognostic biomarkers in melanoma. We examined whether melanoma patients treated with first-line targeted therapy could also benefit from the effects of eosinophils. In total, 243 blood and serum samples from patients with advanced melanoma were prospectively and retrospectively collected before and after drug initiation. To link eosinophil function to improved clinical outcome, soluble serum markers and peripheral blood counts were used for correlative studies using a homogeneous study cohort. In addition, functional and phenotypical characterizations provided insights into the expression profile and activity of freshly isolated eosinophils, including comparisons between patients and healthy donors. Our data showed a significant correlation between high pre-treatment blood eosinophil counts and improved response to targeted therapy and by trend to combinatorial immunotherapy in patients with metastatic melanoma. In accordance with previous studies our results links eosinophil blood counts to better response in melanoma patients. High pre-treatment ECP serum concentration correlated with response to immunotherapy but not to targeted therapy. Eosinophils from healthy donors and patients showed functional and phenotypical similarities. Functional assays revealed a strong cytotoxic potential of blood eosinophils towards melanoma cells in vitro, inducing apoptosis and necrosis. In addition, in vitro cytotoxicity was an active process of peripheral eosinophils and melanoma cells with bidirectional features and required close cell-cell interaction. The extent of cytotoxicity was dose-dependent and showed susceptibility to changes in physical factors like adherence. Importantly, we provide evidence of an additive tumoricidal function of eosinophils and combinatorial targeted therapy in vitro. In summary, we give valuable insights into the complex and treatment-dependent role of eosinophils in melanoma. As a result, our data support the suggestion of eosinophils and their secreted mediators as potential prognostic biomarkers. It will take additional studies to examine the molecular mechanisms that underlie our findings.}, subject = {Melanom}, language = {en} }