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PD-L1 expression in schistosomal granuloma: an immunohistochemical study in urinary bladder schistosomiasis.

Abstract

AIMS: Schistosomiasis remains endemic in various parts of the world, and insights into pathogen immunobiology are mainly based on experimental models, while studies on human tissues are limited.

METHODS: We explored the role of immune checkpoint pathway by evaluating the immunohistochemical expression of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in a retrospective cohort of patients with bilharzial cystitis. Inflammation severity by conventional histology and staining intensity by immunohistochemistry were assigned three-tier scores (0/1+/2+), and a cut-off for staining percentage was set at 5%.

RESULTS: 38 biopsies from 31 patients were considered adequate for evaluation, and positive staining was detected in 80.6% of patients (34 biopsies). High expressors (22.6%) showed strong positive membranous staining (score 2+) with high staining density (more than 5% of inflammatory cells). Low expressors (58.1%) showed mild/moderate staining (score 1+) predominantly in less than 5% of the cells (91.6%) or expressed restricted cytoplasmic staining (6/31). All high expressors showed severe inflammation (score 2+) (p<0.001), and viable ova were only observed in these cases. Calcified ova were associated with mild/moderate inflammation or absent/minimal inflammation, correlating with low expressors or non-expressors (19.4%), respectively.

CONCLUSION: Schistosomal granuloma exhibits upregulated PD-L1 expression proportional to inflammation severity and pathogen viability, highlighting a critical immune checkpoint engagement in disease pathology.

More information

Type
Journal Article
Author
Elhalaby R
Zeina W
Nessim L
Ahmed M
Kamel N
Anis S
Dong H
Cheville J
Kwon E