Previous studies with animal tumors showed that bone marrow (BM) is a privileged site where potentially lethal tumor cells are controlled in a dormant state by the immune system. Here, we investigated BM of breast cancer patients with respect to tumor cell content, immune activation status and memory T-cell content. BM-derived cells from primary operated breast cancer patients (n = 90) were compared with those from healthy donors (n = 10) and also with cells from respective blood samples. Cytokeratin 19-positive tumor cells were detected by nested polymerase chain reaction. Three-color flow cytometry was used to identify numbers and activation state of T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, monocytes/macrophages and subsets by a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). The proportion of memory T cells among the CD4 and CD8 T cells was much higher in BM of cancer patients than in healthy donors (p < 0.001). The extent of memory T-cell increase was related to the size of the primary tumor. Patient-derived BM memory CD8 T cells could be shown to contain specific HLA-A2/Her-2/neu(369-377) tetramer binding cells. Patients with disseminated tumor cells in their BM had more memory CD4 T cells and more CD56(+) CD8(+) cells than patients with tumor cell-negative BM. Only some of the immunological changes seen in BM samples of cancer patients were also detectable in peripheral blood samples. Our hypothesis that BM is a special compartment for immunological memory and tumor dormancy is supported by the above findings. The overall results reveal that BM is a valuable additional compartment for immune diagnosis in pathological conditions and possibly for follow-up treatment strategies.
Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.