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Spatial statistics for identifying and scoring immune clusters in high-plex profiles of primary prostate cancer

Amiryousefi, A.; Wala, J.; Lin, J.-R.; Labadie, B. W.; Atmakuri, A.; Maliga, Z.; Toye, E.; Chaudagar, K.; Torcasso, M. S.; Coy, S.; Fanelli, G. N.; Kobs, B.; Socciarelli, F.; Gagne, A.; Van Allen, E. M.; Patnaik, A.; Sorger, P.

2026-07-08 cancer biology
10.1101/2025.09.21.677465 bioRxiv
Show abstract

The spatial arrangement of immune cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) varies widely, from dispersed to clustered and tumor excluded to infiltrating. Multiplexed spatial profiling is an effective means of characterizing tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and immune complexes such as tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) in the TME. However, few approaches have been described for objectively parametrizing patterns of immune organization and assessing their association with biological or clinical variables. This makes it difficult to evaluate whether a set of tumors is relatively immunologically cold or hot. Here we describe an intuitive set of statistical tools (available in the R package, tlsR) for characterizing lymphocyte patterns in the TME of solid cancers. We apply tlsR to primary prostate cancer (PCa), which is often described as immunologically cold. Using a cohort of 29 radical prostatectomy specimens stratified into low Gleason-grade (LGG; n=15) and high Gleason-grades (HGG; n =14) we show that HGG PCa is significantly more infiltrated than LGG PCa with lymphocytes organized into B cell or T cell enriched immune clusters (BICs and TICs). A subset of these ICs have the B and T cell zonation and follicular dendritic cells characteristic of a bona fide TLS. HGGs are also enriched with ICs containing precursor exhausted T cells (Tpex) and proliferating B cells and their tumor compartments harbor granzyme-B+ cytotoxic T cells in contact with cancer cells. Thus, far from being cold, a subset of HGG PCa has features associated with active immune surveillance, a finding with implications for emerging PCa immunotherapies.

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