Simple Summary: Neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract (GEP-NEN) are a rare type of tumor with considerable variability in the course of disease, which makes clinical management particularly challenging. Biomarkers that are able to guide personalized treatment decisions would be of importance, but are not yet available. In this study, we demonstrate that tissue expression, as well as circulating levels of the cytokine Flt3L in advanced and aggressive tumors, predict survival and time to progression. Increased tumoral Flt3L was also associated with upregulation of genes related to immune activation, suggesting Flt3L as a surrogate marker of host anti-tumor immunity. Therefore, Flt3L measurements in serum may hold promise as a biomarker of disease outcome that could support personalized treatment decisions in GEP-NEN patients, potentially guiding researchers towards viable immunotherapies.
Background: The clinical management of high-grade gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms (GEP-NEN) is challenging due to disease heterogeneity, illustrating the need for reliable biomarkers facilitating patient stratification and guiding treatment decisions. FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 ligand (Flt3L) is emerging as a prognostic or predictive surrogate marker of host tumoral immune response and might enable the stratification of patients with otherwise comparable tumor features. Methods: We evaluated Flt3L gene expression in tumor tissue as well as circulating Flt3L levels as potential biomarkers in a cohort of 54 patients with GEP-NEN. Results: We detected a prominent induction of Flt3L gene expression in individual G2 and G3 NEN, but not in G1 neuroendocrine tumors (NET). Flt3L mRNA expression levels in tumor tissue predicted the disease-related survival of patients with highly proliferative G2 and G3 NEN more accurately than the conventional criteria of grading or NEC/NET differentiation. High level Flt3L mRNA expression was associated with the increased expression of genes related to immunogenic cell death, lymphocyte effector function and dendritic cell maturation, suggesting a less tolerogenic (more proinflammatory) phenotype of tumors with Flt3L induction. Importantly, circulating levels of Flt3L were also elevated in high grade NEN and correlated with patients' progression-free and disease-related survival, thereby reflecting the results observed in tumor tissue. Conclusions: We propose Flt3L as a prognostic biomarker for high grade GEP-NEN, harnessing its potential as a marker of an inflammatory tumor microenvironment. Flt3L measurements in serum, which can be easily be incorporated into clinical routine, should be further evaluated to guide patient stratification and treatment decisions.