
Study Finds Associations Between T Cell Diversity in Peripheral Blood and Patient Age and Stage of Breast Cancer Development
Researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have found that the diversity of T cells in peripheral blood declines with age in patients with breast cancer and, in younger patients, is lower in those diagnosed with metastatic disease than with ductal carcinoma in situ.
RESEARCH SUMMARY
Study Title: Peripheral blood TCR clonotype diversity as an age-associated marker of breast cancer progression
Publication: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute co-first authors: Jun Nishida, PhD, Simona Cristea, PhD, and Sudheshna Bodapati
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute senior authors:
Summary: Researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have found that the diversity of T cells in peripheral blood declines with age in patients with breast cancer and, in younger patients, is lower in those diagnosed with metastatic disease than with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). The findings are based on an analysis of blood samples from 485 patients with newly diagnosed stage 0 (DCIS) or stage IV (metastatic) breast cancer. The patients were participants in the Young Women's Breast Cancer Study and EMBRACE cohort study led by Dana-Farber's
Impact: The findings underscore the role of patient age and peripheral immunity in the evolution and progression of breast cancer. With further research, TCR diversity may become a useful age-dependent biomarker for predicting breast cancer risk and the risk of tumor progression.
Funding: National Cancer Institute grants R35 CA197623 and U24CA224613; Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center SPORE P50CA168504; the Breast Cancer Research Foundation; Susan G. Komen; American Cancer Society; Louise Sandberg Fund; the Ludwig Center at Harvard.



































