The effect of neoadjuvant therapy on PD-L1 expression and CD8+lymphocyte density in non-small cell lung cancer

PD-L1 expression is the routine clinical biomarker for the selection of patients to receive immunotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the application and best timing of immunotherapy in the resectable setting is still under investigation. We aimed to study the effect of chemotherapy on PD-L1 expression and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), which is to date still poorly understood. Our retrospective, single-centre neoadjuvant cohort comprised 96 consecutive patients with NSCLC resected 2000–2016 after neoadjuvant therapy, including paired diagnostic chemo-naïve specimens in 53 cases. A biologically matched surgical cohort of 114 primary resected cases was included. PD-L1 expression, CD8 + TILs density and tertiary lymphoid structures were assessed on whole slides and correlated with clinico-pathological characteristics and survival. Seven/53 and 12/53 cases had lower respectively higher PD-L1 expressions after neoadjuvant therapy. Most cases (n = 34) showed no changes in PD-L1 expression, the majority of these harboring PD-L1 < 1% in both samples (21/34 [61.8%]). Although CD8 + TILs density was significantly higher after chemotherapy (p = 0.031) in resections compared to diagnostic biopsies, this might be due to sampling and statistical bias. No difference in PD-L1 expression or CD8 + TILs density was detected when comparing the neoadjuvant and surgical cohort. In univariable analyses, higher CD8 + TILs density, higher numbers of tertiary lymphoid structures but not PD-L1 expression were significantly associated with longer survival. Increased PD-L1 expression after neoadjuvant chemotherapy was not significantly associated with shorter 5-year survival, but the number of cases was very low. In multivariable analysis, only pT category and age remained independent prognostic factors. In summary, PD-L1 expression was mostly unchanged after neoadjuvant chemotherapy compared to diagnostic biopsies. The sample size of cases with changed PD-L1 expression was too small to draw conclusions on any prognostic value.


INTRODUCTION
Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer worldwide, mainly explainable by the late diagnosis due to presentation in advanced stages (UICC/AJCC TNM stage III/IV) 1 .
For early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), surgery still offers the best chance of cure 2 . However, especially in nodalpositive patients, there is a high risk of recurrence and death. Since randomized trials have shown that additional neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy leads to better outcomes compared to resection only, it is generally accepted that patients with lymph node metastatic NSCLC should not receive surgery as a stand-alone treatment 3,4 . Adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy offers a modest 5-year survival benefit of about 5% and is recommended for patients with completely resected earlystage, high-risk NSCLCweighing the benefits and risks 5 . Perioperative therapeutic approaches are a hotly debated topic, with immunotherapy-based combinations and targeted treatmentsin EGFR mutated NSCLCdominating the current trial landscape. According to surgical outcomes from the phase III CheckMate 816 trial, the neoadjuvant combination of nivolumab and chemotherapy showed considerably lower rates of residual tumor compared with chemotherapy alone 6 . Primary results of the phase III global IMpower010 trial demonstrated a significant improvement in disease-free survival (DFS) comparing atezolizumab with best supportive care after adjuvant chemotherapy for resected stage IB -IIIA NSCLC. The greatest benefit was observed in patients with a tumoral programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression ≥1% 7 .
Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) and its ligand PD-L1 belong to the costimulatory pathway of the adapted immune system 8 . Extensive studies have explained the hijacking of this regulatory pathway by different tumor entities including lung cancer 8 . PD1 is expressed on the surface of T cells, mediating inhibitory and stimulatory signals 8 . The overexpression of PD-L1 on the surface of tumor cells leads to evasion of an appropriate tumorinduced response of the immune system by T cell apoptosis and exhaustion 8 . The combination of immune checkpoint blockade and chemotherapy seems to be beneficial especially in patients with low levels of PD-L1 expressing tumor cells and ongoing trials are reporting positive results of this regimen in patients with resectable lung cancer 6,9 . However, the selection of appropriate patients is currently based only on PD-L1 expression in tumor tissue prior to medication, which is a suboptimal biomarker. More selective tools or, conceivably, a combination of multiple tumor immunity markers such as tumor mutational burden or CD8 + tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are needed to predict response to treatment. This is highlighted by recent examples of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) benefit irrespective of tumoral PD-L1 expression 10 . Furthermore, it is still unclear how classic neoadjuvant chemotherapy influences the tumor microenvironment and if it could promote therapeutic ICB. Regarding the neoadjuvant setting, several studies have reported dynamic changes, though without a clear trend of altered PD-L1 expression after chemotherapy ( Table 1) [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23] . These results contrast preclinical data substantiating an immunogenic effect to some chemotherapeutic agents and functional studies reporting the mechanisms involved in chemotherapy resistance and PD-L1 upregulation 14,19,24 .
Here, we aimed to assess PD-L1 expression and CD8 + TILs density and their prognostic importance in a real-life cohort of patients with NSCLC resected after neoadjuvant chemo(radio) therapy compared to paired diagnostic samples and a biologically matched surgical cohort with primary resected advanced NSCLC.

MATERIAL AND METHODS Study population
This retrospective single center study was conducted on consecutive patients with NSCLCs, resected between January 2000 and December 2016 in the Department of thoracic surgery of the Inselspital and diagnosed at the Institute of Pathology, University of Bern. It includes a neoadjuvant cohort of cases resected after neoadjuvant (radio-)chemotherapy, as previously described 25 , and a biologically matched surgical cohort of primary resected cases of lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) and lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) at a locally advanced stage, defined by the presence of mediastinal lymph-node metastases (pN2) 26 . The cases were included according to pathology reports, validated and expanded by considering the clinical files of the Inselspital Bern (clinical data), cantonal cancer registry of Bern (survival data) and by contacting the general practitioners (clinical and survival data).
The initial neoadjuvant cohort consisted of 130 patients and was reduced to 118 patients after excluding tumors with neuroendocrine histology and patients not treated with neoadjuvant intention (flowchart in supplementary fig. S1). For PD-L1 and tumor microenvironment evaluation (CD8 + TILs and tertiary lymphoid structures, TLS), the cohort was further reduced to 96 respectively 95 patients due to insufficient residual tumor in the excluded case (Supplementary fig. S1). For one patient with a LUSC a second sample was evaluated for PD-L1 due to the incidental diagnosis of an independent small LUAD. Regarding pre-neoadjuvant therapy specimens, 86/118 patients had available diagnostic biopsies or cytology specimens, in 53 cases with sufficient tumor content for PD-L1 assessment and in 36 cases with adequate material for CD8 + TILs evaluation, excluding cytologies and lymph node biopsies without desmoplastic reaction. TLS were not evaluated in the pretherapeutic specimens.
The surgical cohort was biologically matched, meaning that the final tumor stage would have qualified for neoadjuvant therapy (pN2), had it been suspected preoperatively. It consisted initially of 115 cases including 60 patients with LUAD and 55 patients with LUSC. Finally, 114 patients were included for PD-L1 evaluation and 111 patients for CD8 + TILs and TLS evaluation (Supplementary fig. S1).
For harmonization, all cases were pathologically re-evaluated by SB and PZ and re-staged according to the current 8 th edition of the UICC TNM classification 26 . We only included the pathological TNM classification as assessed using the resection specimens. Additionally, the predominant growth pattern was assessed for primary resected LUAD cases according to the current 2021 World Health Organization criteria 27 . Table 2 summarizes the baseline characteristics of the cohorts including p-values of the statistical comparison if applicable. We did not statistically compare tumor stages (due to selection bias in the surgical cohort as described above), growth pattern (not assessable after neoadjuvant therapy) and neoadjuvant (radio)chemotherapy (only applied to patients of the neoadjuvant cohort).
This study was carried out according to the REMARK criteria and approved by the Cantonal Ethics Commission of the Canton of Bern (KEK 2017-00830), which waived the requirement for written informed consent 28 .

Survival analyses
We restricted the survival analyses to five years after initial diagnosis to account for the multimorbidity of patients. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the period from the beginning of treatment to death of any cause. DFS was defined as the period from the beginning of treatment to clinically reported relapse or death of any cause. The beginning of treatment was defined by the start of neoadjuvant therapy in the neoadjuvant cohort or the date of resection in the surgical cohort and in 2 cases with missing information about the starting date of neoadjuvant therapy. Patients with stage IV disease (n = 14), missing survival information (n = 7), non-curative resection (n = 2) or last follow-up information within 30 days after surgery (n = 12) were excluded from survival analyses resulting in 175 patients included (Supplementary fig. S1). Median OS was 35 (95% CI 29 -NA) months and 87 events were observed (Supplementary fig. S2A). Median DFS was 18 (95% CI 15-25) months and 118 events were observed (Supplementary fig. S2B). There was no significant difference of survival between the neoadjuvant cohort and the surgical cohort (Supplementary fig. S2C, D).

Immunohistochemical staining and scanning
For immunohistochemical staining appropriate tissue blocks were selected after screening all available H&E slides.
PD-L1 staining was effectuated in a closed system using the Ventana PD-L1 (SP263) assay (Roche Diagnostics International AG, Rotkreuz, Switzerland) on the fully automated immunostainer BenchMark ULTRA (Roche Diagnostics International AG) following the manufacturer's instructions. The sections were pre-processed using CC1 buffer at 100°C for 64 min, followed by antibody incubation at 37°C for 16 min and visualization with DAB.
CD8 staining was effectuated using C8/144B (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, United States) on the fully automated immunostainer BOND III (Leica Biosystems, Muttenz, Switzerland). The sections were pre-processed with ER2 buffer at 100°C for 20 min, followed by incubation of the diluted antibody (1:200) for 15 min and visualization with DAB.
Selected slides were digitized using the Pannoramic P250 Flash III (3DHistech, Budapest, Hungary) in multiple runs at a resolution of 0.2431 µm/pixel.
The tissue had been obtained during the routine diagnostic workflow and the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue had been stored at the Institute of Pathology Bern according to the recommendation of the Swiss Society of Pathology 29 . There was no evidence of time-dependent staining bias with similar distributions of PD-L1 or CD8 expression along the period of observation (Supplementary fig. S3A, B).

PD-L1 assessment
Specimens with at least 100 tumor cells were eligible. PD-L1 expression was assessed by PZ and reviewed on a double-headed microscope together with SB. In cases of discordant assessment consensus was achieved. PD-L1 expression was assessed as the tumor proportional score (TPS), defined by the proportion of PD-L1 positive tumor cells of all tumor cells. PD-L1 positive tumor cells were defined as showing membranous staining of any intensity. TPS was assessed as a continuous parameter in 1% increments up to 10% and 5% increments in cases showing >10% expression. For statistical analyses, cases were assigned to the three clinically relevant bins of TPS < 1%, 1-49% or ≥50%. PD-L1 positive cases were defined by TPS ≥ 1% and strong expressing cases were defined as TPS ≥ 50%.

Assessment of CD8 + tumor infiltrating lymphocytes and tertiary lymphoid structures
For the assessment of CD8 + TILs, only biopsies of non-lymph nodes or lymph nodes with desmoplastic reaction were eligible. We evaluated CD8 + TILs per mm 2 applying a semi-automated approach using the opensource software QuPath (Supplementary fig. S4) 30 . First, we manually annotated regions of interest following recommendations of the International Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers Working Group 31,32 . Thus, only TILs within the borders of the invasive front of tumors were evaluated and smaller satellite nodules without desmoplastic reaction were not included in the assessment. In neoadjuvant cases with extensive fibrotic areas, only the  stroma adjacent to the tumor nests was included for analyses. Next, cells in the annotated regions were segmented using the threshold-based watershed detection of QuPath followed by the application of a series of object classifiers for exclusion of anthracotic pigments and artefacts before classification and counting of CD8 negative and positive cells (technical manuscript in preparation). The performance of this automated detection and classification was compared in 22 cases using 5000 ×5000 px wide squares against manual counting of one observer (PZ , Supplementary  table 1).
Regarding the evaluation of TLS, the digitized H&E sections were used for manual assessment of the number and activity (presence of germinal centers) of TLS in the resection specimens by PZ 33 . In 44 cases, another block than used for PD-L1 or CD8 assessment was evaluated due to the presence of larger areas of adjacent normal lung tissue. All nodular aggregates of lymphocytes in the tumor region and within 7 mm of the tumor border were counted 33 . In cases of densely infiltrated tumoral stroma, only nodular aggregates apparent on low magnification were included.

Statistics
All analyses were conducted using R software (version 4.0.5, https://cran.rproject.org/) with suitable packages. For comparison of naturally ordered categorical variables or continuous variables, we used the Wilcoxon ranksum or Kruskal-Wallis test and for comparison of other categorical variables the Fisher's exact test. Correlation was assessed using the Spearman test. Survival analyses were conducted using the Log-rank test and univariable cox proportional hazard models. Kaplan-Meier plots were used for the representation of survival curves. Multivariable cox proportional hazard models were used for correction for confounders, which were selected based on a significance level of p ≤ 0.1. CD8 + TILs density was included as binary variable (low vs. high) in all survival models. It was dichotomized using maximally selected rank statistics based on Log-rank scores as test statistic and the approximation by Hothorn and Lausen for small sample sizes 34 .
Except for smoking status (active smoker vs. former-/ never smoker) none of the clinico-pathological parameters was associated with higher PD-L1 expression. In the neoadjuvant cohort, active smoking was associated with a higher PD-L1 TPS (p = 0.013). Active smokers had a significantly higher frequency of PD-L1 positive tumors in the neoadjuvant cohort (p = 0.02, Supplementary fig. S5) and inversely in the surgical cohort (p = 0.026, Supplementary fig. S5).
CD8 + TILs density was significantly lower before neoadjuvant therapy comparing paired samples (p = 0.031, Fig. 3). We performed subgroup analyses to check whether changes of CD8 + TILs density were associated with changes in PD-L1 expression. However, changes of CD8 + TILs density were only significant in the subgroup of cases with no change of PD-L1 expression regarding the threefold classification ( Supplementary Fig. S7), presumably due to insufficient sample size in the other subgroups. Furthermore, higher CD8 + density before or after neoadjuvant therapy was not associated with an increase of PD-L1 expression.

Prognostic significance of immune related biomarkers
In the entire study population, PD-L1 expression assessed in resection specimens had no prognostic significance, neither for OS nor for DFS, neither using the three-tier classification nor the cutoffs of 1% or 50% individually (Supplementary fig. S8). In subgroup analyses including only cases after neoadjuvant therapy or primary resected cases, PD-L1 positivity was a prognostic marker for longer OS in the surgical cohort (p = 0.029, HR 0.5255, 95% CI 0.2924-0.9444, Fig. 4). Regarding PD-L1 as a dynamic marker, although patients with decreased PD-L1 expression seemed to have a longer 5-year OS, this was not statistically significant, and the case number was very low (Fig. 5). We used maximally selected rank statistic to determine the adequate cut-off for CD8 + TILs density at 283.18 cells/mm 2 in the entire study population. Overall, higher CD8 + TILs numbers were associated with longer OS (p = 0.014, HR 0.5373, 95% CI 0.3251-0.888, Supplementary fig. S9A) and longer DFS (p = 0.008, HR 0.5707, 95% CI 0.3762-0.8656, Supplementary fig. S9B). In the subgroup analyses, however, it was a positive prognostic factor for OS only in the neoadjuvant cohort (p = 0.029, HR 0.4332, 95% CI 0.1997-0.9397, Fig. 6A) and for DFS only in the surgical cohort (p = 0.048, HR 0.5513, 95% CI 0.3043-0.9986, Fig. 6D).
The number of TLS was considered as a continuous variable and it was a prognostic marker considering the entire study population (p = 0.045, HR 0.9833, 95% CI 0.9673-0.9996) but not in the sub-cohorts (p neoadjuvant = 0.15, p surgical = 0.15).
We investigated the validity of the prognostic significance only in the overall population to achieve sufficient sample size and number of events. As the three immune markers PD-L1 expression, CD8 + TILs and TLS correlated significantly, we performed a cox regression analysis for each marker. PD-L1 expression was included using the TPS 1% cut-off only. None of the immune markers was prognostic in the multivariable model for OS (p PD-L1 = 0.241, p CD8+ = 0.368, p TLS = 0.246) or DFS (p PD-L1 = 0.054, p CD8+ = 0.098, p TLS = 0.407) but age and pT4 were consistent prognostic factors in the multivariable models (Supplementary fig. S10).

DISCUSSION
In this study on immune related biomarkers in locally advanced resectable NSCLC, CD8 + TILs and TLS were prognostic factors but did not yield additional information to age and TNM in multivariable analyses. CD8 + TILs density correlated with PD-L1 expression. PD-L1 expression was not consistently upregulated after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in line with some, but not all previous studies 13,16,[19][20][21][22] . The effect of chemotherapy on PD-L1 expression in the resectable setting has been previously investigated as summarized in Table 1 [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23] . Most studies reported an increased PD-L1 expression after chemotherapy when assessing paired samples. The importance of the PI3K/ALK pathway in PD-L1 upregulation after chemotherapy was demonstrated in in vitro and in vivo functional assays 14,19 . Conversely, some studies showed no change or even a decreased PD-L1 expression following chemotherapy 11,12,15,17,18 . In fact, when reassessing the positive studies and considering the absolute number of cases per category (decrease, no change, increase), most cases did not change. Of the four studies conducted using an FDA approved antibody, only one concluded an increased PD-L1 expression postchemotherapy 15,17,18,20 . Thus, our study results are in line with previous reports for FDA approved antibodies and suggest that changes in PD-L1 expression due to chemotherapy are observed only in a minority of tumors. In the majority of our cases (34/53) PD-L1 expression was stable and most of them were negative (21/ 34 cases) in both the biopsy/cytology specimens and the resection after neoadjuvant therapy. This concordance between biopsy and resection in explicit cases (TPS < 1% or ≥50%) was also described in a larger study by Hwang et al. performed on 103 paired cases without focus on neoadjuvant therapy 35 . The authors reported only a moderate concordance, primarily explained by considerable discordance in cases with intermediate PD-L1 expression (TPS 1-49%) 35 . Considering these and previously reported results, it seems unlikely that neoadjuvant chemotherapy induces PD-L1 expression.
Chemotherapy is deemed to improve immunosurveillance by different effects (antigenicity, immunogenicity, susceptibility) 36 . This would suggest an upregulation of PD-L1 in tumor cells to evade a strong antitumor response. A potential explanation for the lack of consistent upregulation in clinical samples could be the influence of chemotherapy on the immune microenvironment. Two larger studies have investigated such effects in detail by applying multiplex immunofluorescence and a multiomics approach 16,23 . Both studies describe an increase of immune cells in specimens after neoadjuvant therapy and point out that different subgroups of immune cells are increased depending on the underlying histological tumor type 16,23 . However, the multiomics approach indicated no increase of T-cell receptor richness and clonality, thus failed to validate the supposed increase of antigenicity or susceptibility 23 . Importantly, these studies did not include paired samples and, especially the study using multiomics, included only few cases depending on the performed analysis (n = 10-72) 23 .
In order to account for the immune microenvironment, we assessed the CD8 + TILs density and number and state of TLS. By applying a semiautomatic approach, we were able to count CD8 + TILs in the entire tumor region of the slides used for PD-L1 assessment, in contrast to the published studies usually performing hot spot analysis [37][38][39][40] . Although we confirmed published results indicating an increase of TILs in tumors resected after neoadjuvant therapy 15,18,22 , we cannot conclude that chemotherapy increases CD8 + TILs densities due to (a) no significant difference in CD8 + density between cases resected after neoadjuvant therapy and primary resected cases, (b) biopsies covering much smaller tissue areas than whole slides (thus being more prone to sampling error due to heterogeneity), and (c) higher variance in post-neoadjuvant therapy specimens leading to higher median ranks and means due to outliers (implications for statistical testing). Another explanation, comparing preclinical and clinical studies, could be the heterogeneity of applied chemotherapeutic regimens, inherent in our real-life cohort approach. Although most cytotoxic agents have immunosurveillance enhancing effects, these differ considerably 36 . Thus, while oxaliplatin and gemcitabine have been shown to promote immunogenic cell death, especially via exposure of calreticulin, others do not without addition of radiotherapy (e.g. cisplatin) 36,41 . Furthermore, although Zhang et al. and Fournel et al. suggested an upregulation of PD-L1 via the PI3K/ALK pathway, earlier studies support rather the downregulation of suppressive checkpoints via the STAT pathway 14,19,41 . In our study, the majority of patients (n = 54) received cisplatin and docetaxel, but only 12/54 received additional radiotherapy 41 . On the other hand, the few patients who had received gemcitabine and had available paired samples (n = 2) showed PD-L1-upregulation despite the lack of neoadjuvant radiotherapy, and only 3/11 cases were PD-L1 negative in the resection specimens.
The prognostic power of PD-L1 expression as a double-edged sword has already been described exhaustively in advanced NSCLC and a high PD-L1 expression does not seem to be consistently associated with shorter survival 42 . Likewise, most studies including tumors after neoadjuvant therapy reported no prognostic importance of PD-L1 expression 11,15,18,[20][21][22]   specimens, was not prognostic. However, the dynamic changes resulting in increased PD-L1 expression could confer worse survival, in accordance with previous studies 12,14,15,21 . Presumably due to the low sample size, this could not be statistically confirmed in our cohort. This effect could be explained by PD-L1 expression potentially conveying chemoresistance and promoting proliferation and epithelial to mesenchymal transition 14,43 .
In the literature and in our study population (combined neoadjuvant and surgical cohort), high CD8 + TILs were commonly associated with improved OS 11,14,18,22,44,45 . This seems to be true even when applying different cut-offs, as most of the published studies used the median, thus a cohort specific cutoff 11,15,18,22,46 . Furthermore, the prognostic impact of a higher CD8 + TILs density is a possible explanation for the prognostic benefit of PD-L1 positivity in primary LUSC, due to the positive correlation of PD-L1 expression and CD8 + TILs. In our cohort, however, CD8 + TILs lost its prognostic relevance in multivariable analyses including age and the pT denominator of the TNM classification. Thus, we cannot confirm the importance of the immune pattern as a complementary factor for survival prediction, as proposed by Remark and colleagues 11 . This retrospective study assessed the impact of chemotherapy on biomarkers for ICB in a real-life cohort resected after neoadjuvant therapy over a period of 16 years. The availability of paired samples for 53 patients is comparable to prior studies but the addition of a matching cohort of primary resected locally advanced NSCLC allowed the validation of identified effects. In contrast to most published studies, we evaluated PD-L1 expression according to the current diagnostic recommendations and using an FDA-approved antibody assay for companion diagnostics [47][48][49] . Furthermore, we included the impact on the immune microenvironment by evaluating CD8 + TILs and TLS. Contrary to published studies, our approach to evaluate TILs was based on an open-source software, was independent from the histological tumor type and addressed lung-specific artefacts as anthracosis, allowing a reliable assessment of CD8 + TILs on the whole slide level corresponding to the area assessed for PD-L1 scoring [37][38][39][40]50 .
Nevertheless, our study has limitations inherent to its retrospective and "real-life" character. In particular, compared to clinical studies investigating the effect of (radio-)chemotherapy, patients with different chemotherapeutic regimens were included 15,18 . Although patients with changed PD-L1 expression after neoadjuvant therapy did not statistically differ from the rest of the cohort regarding duration of neoadjuvant therapy or therapy free interval between the last cycle of neoadjuvant therapy and resection, these differences in duration of therapy and therapy free interval need to be accounted for when interpreting our results.
In conclusion, PD-L1 expression was not altered by intervening neoadjuvant (radio-)chemotherapy but CD8 + TILs were significantly increased. However, cases with intermediate PD-L1 expression (1-49% TPS) in biopsies showed some dynamic (6/12 [50%] cases changed PD-L1 expression in the resection) compared to negative (<1% PD-L1 TPS) or strong positive (≥50% PD-L1 TPS) cases (approximately 30% changed PD-L1 expression in the resection). Thus, it could be of value to repeat PD-L1 testing in cases with intermediate PD-L1 expression. Literature suggests PD-L1 dynamics (decrease, no change, increase) to be a more valid prognostic marker. Although maybe due to the low sample size, this could not be statistically confirmed in our cohort. Subsequent clinical trials are warranted in order to determine if PD-L1 retesting should be performed after neoadjuvant therapy due to therapeutic implications of an altered PD-L1 expression.

DATA AVAILABILITY
Anonymized detailed clinico-pathological data and the R-Script used for data analysis are available upon request to the authors.