scholarly journals Positive Association Between Location of Melanoma, Ultraviolet Signature, Tumor Mutational Burden, and Response to Anti–PD-1 Therapy

2021 ◽  
pp. 1821-1829
Author(s):  
Léa Dousset ◽  
Florence Poizeau ◽  
Caroline Robert ◽  
Sandrine Mansard ◽  
Laurent Mortier ◽  
...  

PURPOSE Emerging evidence suggests a correlation between the tumor mutational burden (TMB) and the response to programmed cell death-1 protein (PD-1) monotherapy across multiple cancer types. In skin cancers, as high TMB is mostly because of ultraviolet (UV) exposure, we hypothesized a correlation between the primary melanoma cutaneous location according to sun exposure and response to anti–PD-1 monotherapy. METHODS The aim of this study was to analyze, in advanced melanoma, the relationship between TMB, locations according to sun exposure, and response to PD-1 inhibitors. We conducted a prospective multicentric analysis, by sequencing the most recent metastatic sample before PD-1 inhibitors using FoundationOne assay. RESULTS One hundred two patients were included, with TMB available for 94 cases. In univariate and multivariate linear regression, TMB was significantly associated with sun-exposed areas of the primary melanoma location and with age (coefficients of the association with log-TMB: non-UV location, –1.05; chronic sun-exposed area, 1.12; P value for the location, < 10–5; age, 0.021 per year, P value for age, .002). Molecular UV signature present on the metastatic site was associated with higher TMB ( P = .003). Melanomas bearing a high TMB had a higher probability of response to PD-1 inhibitors compared with melanomas with a low TMB, with a dose-dependent effect following an exponential curve and a negative odds ratio of 0.40 (95% CI, 0.20 to 0.72, P = .004) between log-TMB and 6-month progression. CONCLUSION Cumulative sun exposure related to skin location and molecular UV signature present on the metastatic site appear to be relevant biomarkers directly linked to TMB. Because TMB is not yet available to all for routine clinical use, the location of the primary melanoma in a sun-exposed area may play an important role in clinical decisions regarding therapeutic choice.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A79-A79
Author(s):  
Stanislav Fridland ◽  
Young Kwang Chae

BackgroundTumor mutational burden (TMB) has been shown to predict response to immune checkpoint inhibitors.1 Furthermore, the FDA has approved the use of TMB as a biomarker for response to pembrolizumab in solid tumors.2 Simultaneously, the relationship between tumor heterogeneity and outcome has been studied across a range of cancer indications and has shown predictive value.3 For Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma (LUSC) the utility of heterogeneity metrics has not been established. To study this relationship we used both TMB and tumor heterogeneity to stratify patients, compare outcomes, explore differences in immune cell enrichment, and predict driver genes.MethodsWe obtained Tumor Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) LUSC SNP, CNV, and RNASeq data from the GDC Data Portal4 and clinical data from the PanCancer Atlas dataset through cBioPortal.5 TMB was calculated by dividing the number of mutations by 38 to yield a mut/Mb value. To estimate tumor heterogeneity we ran PyClone, an algorithm that estimates the number of tumor clones.6 PyClone uses a random seed and output for the same sample may differ. We ran each sample in triplicate on three separate days yielding 9 runs per sample, yielding an average PyClone clone number. Clones with >2 mutations were counted. Using p-value minimization we chose 5 for the TMB cutoff and 4.6 for the PyClone cutoff. This yielded 4 groups: HTHP, HTLP, LTHP, and LTLP, where H - high, L- low, T-TMB, and P-Pyclone. Immune cell enrichment analysis was accomplished with ssGSEA via the GenePattern platform.7 Driver gene prediction was performed with OncoDriveClust8 via the R package maftools.9ResultsA statistically significant difference was found in progression free survival (PFS) between stage I LTHP (LTHPI, N = 15) and stage I LTLP (LTLPI, N = 77) patients (51.27 months vs. 25.4 months, p-value = 0.0059). Intriguingly, highly heterogeneous tumors revealed superior survival outcomes compared to less heterogeneous tumors in this subgroup. LTLPI patients were enriched for immature B cells, regulatory T cells, and myeloid derived suppressor cells (figure 1). Three driver genes were predicted for the LTLPI cohort (NFE2L2, PIK3CA, and TP53), while none were predicted for the LTHPI cohort.Abstract 71 Figure 1Immune Cell Gene Set EnrichmentConclusionsContrary to previous literature, superior survival outcomes were observed in high tumor heterogeneity, low TMB Stage I LUSC patients. Early stage patients can be stratified using heterogeneity metrics like PyClone. Given the presence of specific driver genes and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, this population warrants further investigation for therapeutic implications.AcknowledgementsThis research was supported in part through the computational resources and staff contributions provided by the Genomics Compute Cluster which is jointly supported by the Feinberg School of Medicine, the Center for Genetic Medicine, and Feinberg’s Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, the Office of the Provost, the Office for Research, and Northwestern Information Technology. The Genomics Compute Cluster is part of Quest, Northwestern University’s high performance computing facility, with the purpose to advance research in genomics.Trial RegistrationN/AReferencesSamstein RM, Lee C-H, Shoushtari AN, Hellmann MD, Shen R, Janjigian YY, et al. Tumor mutational load predicts survival after immunotherapy across multiple cancer types. Nature Genetics 2019;51(2):202–6.Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. FDA approves pembrolizumab for adults and children With TMB-H solid tu [Internet]. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA; [cited 2021 Jul 28]. Available from: https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drug-approvals-and-databases/fda-approves-pembrolizumab-adults-and-children-tmb-h-solid-tumorsMorris LGT, Riaz N, Desrichard A, Şenbabaoğlu Y, Hakimi AA, Makarov V, et al. Pan-cancer analysis of intratumor heterogeneity as a prognostic determinant of survival. Oncotarget 2016;7(9):10051–63.GDC. [cited 2021Jul28]. Available from: https://portal.gdc.cancer.gov/cBioPortal for cancer genomics [Internet]. cBioPortal for Cancer Genomics. [cited 2021Jul28]. Available from: https://www.cbioportal.org/Roth A, Khattra J, Yap D, Wan A, Laks E, Biele J, et al. PyClone: Statistical inference of CLONAL population structure in cancer. Nature Methods 2014;11(4):396–8.GenePattern [Internet]. GenePattern sign in. [cited 2021Jul28]. Available from: https://cloud.genepattern.org/gp/pages/index.jsfTamborero D, Gonzalez-Perez A, Lopez-Bigas N. OncodriveCLUST: Exploiting the Positional clustering of somatic mutations to identify CANCER GENES. Bioinformatics. 2013;29(18):2238–44.Mayakonda A, Lin D-C, Assenov Y, Plass C, Koeffler HP. Maftools: Efficient and comprehensive analysis of somatic variants in cancer. Genome Research 2018;28(11):1747–56.Ethics ApprovalN/AConsentN/A


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 9561-9561
Author(s):  
Alexander Noor Shoushtari ◽  
Joshua Armenia ◽  
Arshi Arora ◽  
Jorge Rojas-Zamalloa ◽  
Allison Betof Warner ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e14616-e14616
Author(s):  
Da Jiang ◽  
Zhaojian Niu ◽  
Jianli Zhang ◽  
Yanlei Wang ◽  
Liang Shang ◽  
...  

e14616 Background: The Notch pathway has an important role in tumorigenesis in many types of cancer. Clinical trials with Notch inhibitors are ongoing. Recently, Notch pathway has been reported to be part of tumor immunity and patients with NOTCH1 mutations (mut) showed better outcome to PD-1 inhibitors, however, the underlying mechanism is unknown. Methods: Next generation sequencing (NGS) panel of 450 cancer genes was performed on FFPE tissue and matched blood samples from 1341 solid tumors, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, n = 644), esophageal carcinoma (EC, n = 255), breast cancer (BC, n = 175), small cell lung cancer (SCLC, n = 141), head and neck cancer (HNC, n = 77). Notch family gene (NOTCH1/2/3/4) muts were analyzed. Genomic alterations including single base substitution, short and long insertions/deletion, copy number variation, gene fusion and rearrangement were assessed. Tumor mutational burden (TMB) was calculated in all patients by NGS algorithms. TMB high (TMB-H) was defined as TMB values ≥75% tumors in each tumor type. Results: For all patients, Notch family gene mut (substitution/indel/truncation) were found in 27% EC, 19% SCLC, 12% HNC, 6% BC and 5% HCC. The median TMB was 6.1 muts/Mb. In general, tumors with Notch family gene mut had significantly higher median TMB in pan-cancer cohort when compared with tumors without Notch family gene mut (9.2 vs. 6.1 muts/Mb, p < 0.001). Specifically, tumors with NOTCH1 mut had higher TMB in HCC (8.5 vs 5.5, p = 0.034), in BC (23.2 vs. 4.6, p = 0.006) and in SCLC (14.0 vs. 9.4, p = 0.002), while NOTCH2 mutant tumors presented higher TMB in HCC (18.5 vs. 5.5, p = 0.026), in EC (14.7 vs. 6.9, p = 0.001) and in SCLC (13.2 vs. 4.6, p = 0.026). We found 65% of NOTCH1 mut were located in epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like repeats domain. Classes of the NOTCH1 mutation type were substitution/indel (non-frameshift) (58%) and truncation (42%), while NOTCH2 mut were 88% and 12%. In TMB-H tumors, substitution/indel is the predominant mutation type of Notch family gene (NOTCH1 61%, NOTCH2 100%). Conclusions: Tumors with Notch family gene mut presented higher TMB in multiple cancer types, indicating a potential strategy for targeted and immunotherapy in NOTCH mutant cancers.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. e0244558
Author(s):  
McKayla J. Riggs ◽  
Nan Lin ◽  
Chi Wang ◽  
Dava W. Piecoro ◽  
Rachel W. Miller ◽  
...  

Objective DACH1 is a transcriptional repressor and tumor suppressor gene frequently mutated in melanoma, bladder, and prostate cancer. Loss of DACH1 expression is associated with poor prognostic features and reduced overall survival in uterine cancer. In this study, we utilized the Oncology Research Information Exchange Network (ORIEN) Avatar database to determine the frequency of DACH1 mutations in patients with endometrial cancer in our Kentucky population. Methods We obtained clinical and genomic data for 65 patients with endometrial cancer from the Markey Cancer Center (MCC). We examined the clinical attributes of the cancers by DACH1 status by comparing whole-exome sequencing (WES), RNA Sequencing (RNASeq), microsatellite instability (MSI), and tumor mutational burden (TMB). Results Kentucky women with endometrial cancer had an increased frequency of DACH1 mutations (12/65 patients, 18.5%) compared to The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) endometrial cancer population (25/586 patients, 3.8%) with p-value = 1.04E-05. DACH1 mutations were associated with increased tumor mutation count in both TCGA (median 65 vs. 8972, p-value = 7.35E-09) and our Kentucky population (490 vs. 2160, p-value = 6.0E-04). DACH1 mutated patients have a higher tumor mutation burden compared to DACH1 wild-type (24 vs. 6.02, p-value = 4.29E-05). DACH1 mutations showed significant gene co-occurrence patterns with POLE, MLH1, and PMS2. DACH1 mutations were not associated with an increase in microsatellite instability at MCC (MSI-H) (p-value = 0.1342). Conclusions DACH1 mutations are prevalent in Kentucky patients with endometrial cancer. These mutations are associated with high tumor mutational burden and co-occur with genome destabilizing gene mutations. These findings suggest DACH1 may be a candidate biomarker for future trials with immunotherapy, particularly in endometrial cancers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 4584-4584
Author(s):  
Gennady Bratslavsky ◽  
Andrea Necchi ◽  
Oleg Shapiro ◽  
Joseph Jacob ◽  
Julia Andrea Elvin ◽  
...  

4584 Background: We CGP to characterize the genomic alterations (GA) in MP and to enable the search for potential therapy targets. Methods: From a series of 201,766 consecutive clinical cases, 44 cases of clinically advanced MP underwent CGP using a hybrid-capture based commercial assay to evaluate all classes of GA. Tumor mutational burden (TMB) was determined on 1.1 Mbp of sequenced DNA and reported as mutations/Mb and microsatellite instability (MSI) was determined on 114 loci. PD-L1 expression was determined by IHC (DAKO 22C3 antibody). Results: All patients had clinically advanced recurrent and/or metastatic disease. 23 patients were females and 21 patients were males. There were 34 (77%) of MP known to have originated in the adrenal gland and 10 (23%) of the MP were sequenced from metastatic site where the exact primary site was unknown. The primary tumor was used for sequencing in 14 (32%) of the MP cases and a non-primary tumor metastatic site (liver, lung, bone, soft tissue, lymph node, kidney, peritoneal cavity, and chest wall) in 30 (68%) of the MP cases. There were 2.3 GA/tumor. The most frequent un-targetable GA were ATRX (25%), TP53 (21%), SDHB (13%), CTNNB1 (7%), VHL (7%), and CDKN2A/2B, PIK3R2, NOTCH2 and MEN1 (all 5%). The most frequent potentially targetable GA included RET (9%), NF1 (9%) and FGFR1 (5%). PBRM1 GA were found in 2% of MAP. Germline mutations in known cancer predisposition genes were predicted in 8 (18%) of cases involving SDHB (5 cases) and BRCA1, MEN1, and MSH2 (1 case each). The genomic signatures of primary MP were not significantly different from that obtained from sequencing of metastatic site biopsies. 0 (0%) of 5 MP stained positively for PD-L1 expression. The mean TMB was 2.95 mutations/Mb, the median TMB was 2.4 mutations/Mb. There 2 (5%) of MP with TMB ≥ 10 mutations/MB and 0 (0%) with TMB ≥ 20 mutations/Mb. 0 (0%) of 33 MP evaluated for MSI had a MSI-High status. Conclusions: Although the GA/tumor is relatively low for MP, CGP can reveal important potential therapy targets including RET, NF1 and FGFR1. MP do not reveal strong potential for immunotherapies with low TMB, absence of MSI-High status and low (2%) PBRM1 mutation frequencies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3109-3109
Author(s):  
Mark Farha ◽  
Neil Jairath ◽  
Issam El Naqa ◽  
Daniel Eidelberg Spratt ◽  
Theodore Lawrence

3109 Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) restore T cell function by reversing T cell exhaustion. Variable response to ICIs warrants the development of precise predictive biomarkers, which is challenging due to difficulty in capturing the interplay of factors involved with tumor cell immune recognition. High intratumoral expression of MR1, the MHC-I related protein basally expressed on cancer cells, may drive T cell exhaustion through presentation of cancer-specific antigens. Here, we construct a database to study the relationship between MR1, tumor mutational burden (TMB), the PD-1/PD-L1 axis and T cell exhaustion across 8,975 sequenced tumors and 27 cancer types. Methods: RNA Seq by expectation maximization (RSEM) values from the TCGA were collected and normalized along with expression data for markers of interest (Table). TMB was defined as the number of non-synonymous somatic mutations per sample. For each cancer, 5 cohorts were created based on ascending mean expression levels of MR1, PD-1, PD-L1, and increasing TMB. For each cancer, an “immunogenicity score” for these factors was computed, and its relationship with T cell exhaustion signatures was assessed via linear regression. Data is presented as adjusted R2 and p-value. Results: While PD-1 and T cell exhaustion marker expression were correlated across cancers, the “immunogenicity score” (IS) correlated with exhaustion markers specifically in cancers with FDA-approved ICIs. Excluding MR1 from the score weakened the correlation with EOMES and TBET expression (Table). Each component of the score analyzed independently failed to show a statistically significant correlation for both EOMES and TBET expression. Conclusions: In this cross-cancer analysis, we support the hypothesis that presentation of metabolic intermediates in cancer cells via MR1 may drive T cell exhaustion. Also, the novel “immunogenicity score”, which incorporates MR1 into standard biomarkers for response to ICIs may convey the global picture of cancer cell recognition by the immune system and warrants further investigation as a tool for predicting clinical response. [Table: see text]


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Chuang Zhou ◽  
Song Chen ◽  
Fei Xu ◽  
Jinwang Wei ◽  
Xiaoyu Zhou ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii126-ii126
Author(s):  
Amber Ruiz ◽  
Jerome Graber

Abstract Our understanding of genetic predispositions for malignancy is continually evolving. One family of germline mutations well described in the literature is that of the DNA mismatch repair mechanism (MMR). Lynch syndrome (LS) is due to a loss of function mutation of several MMR genes- MSH2, MLH1, MSH6, and PMS2. Germline MMR mutations lead to microsatellite instability and loss of genomic integrity resulting in an increased risk for various cancers (colorectal, genitourinary, etc). LS may be as common as 1 in 400 people and some MMR mutations have been associated with gliomas. There is a paucity of information regarding frequency of glioma subtypes as well as tumor genetic and molecular characteristics which have important clinical implications. We describe a case series of 6 individuals with germline MMR mutations and brain tumors. Those with MSH2 and PMS2 mutations (n=3) developed glioblastomas at a mean age at diagnosis of 48 years. These tumors expressed MGMT hyper-methylation and high tumor mutational burden. Only one had IDH-1 mutation. Those with MLH1 mutations (n=3), did not develop gliomas. This raises the question of differential glioma subtype development based on MMR gene. It also highlights the possibility of Lynch-associated gliomas having more favorable treatment response due to MGMT methylation and potential response to immunotherapy based on high tumor mutational burden. Though the sample size is small, there appears to be a preponderance of women compared to men (5:1 respectively). Larger studies are needed to verify CNS involvement in germline MMR mutations. In doing so, we hope to identify factors that may influence clinical management and lead to a better understanding of treatment response and disease prognosis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 107610
Author(s):  
Kai Kang ◽  
Fucun Xie ◽  
Yijun Wu ◽  
Zhile Wang ◽  
Li Wang ◽  
...  

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