| Literature DB >> 29728604 |
Sean P Pitroda1,2, Nikolai N Khodarev1,2, Lei Huang3, Abhineet Uppal4, Sean C Wightman4, Sabha Ganai5, Nora Joseph6, Jason Pitt7, Miguel Brown7, Martin Forde7, Kathy Mangold6, Lai Xue4, Christopher Weber8, Jeremy P Segal8, Sabah Kadri8, Melinda E Stack4, Sajid Khan9, Philip Paty10, Karen Kaul6, Jorge Andrade3, Kevin P White7,11, Mark Talamonti12, Mitchell C Posner4, Samuel Hellman1,2, Ralph R Weichselbaum13,14.
Abstract
The oligometastasis hypothesis suggests a spectrum of metastatic virulence where some metastases are limited in extent and curable with focal therapies. A subset of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer achieves prolonged survival after resection of liver metastases consistent with oligometastasis. Here we define three robust subtypes of de novo colorectal liver metastasis through integrative molecular analysis. Patients with metastases exhibiting MSI-independent immune activation experience the most favorable survival. Subtypes with adverse outcomes demonstrate VEGFA amplification in concert with (i) stromal, mesenchymal, and angiogenic signatures, or (ii) exclusive NOTCH1 and PIK3C2B mutations with E2F/MYC activation. Molecular subtypes complement clinical risk stratification to distinguish low-risk, intermediate-risk, and high-risk patients with 10-year overall survivals of 94%, 45%, and 19%, respectively. Our findings provide a framework for integrated classification and treatment of metastasis and support the biological basis of curable oligometastatic colorectal cancer. These concepts may be applicable to many patients with metastatic cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29728604 PMCID: PMC5935683 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04278-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Clinical and pathological characteristics of colorectal cancer patients
| Clinicopathological variable | Clinical cohort ( |
|---|---|
| Age (median, range) | 61 (29–85) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 57% |
| Female | 43% |
| Primary tumor | |
| Colon | 72% |
| Rectum | 28% |
| Metastatic presentation | |
| Synchronous | 47% |
| Metachronous | 53% |
| Tumor size | |
| ≤5 cm | 78% |
| >5 cm | 22% |
| Primary lymph node status | |
| Negative | 36% |
| Positive | 64% |
| Initial number of liver metastases | |
| 1 | 61% |
| 2 | 22% |
| 3+ | 17% |
| Disease-free interval from primary tumor to metastasis | |
| <12 mo | 61% |
| ≥12 mo | 39% |
| CEA level | |
| <200 ng/mL | 95% |
| ≥200 ng/mL | 5% |
| Clinical risk scores (CRS) | |
| <2 | 34% |
| ≥2 | 66% |
| Hepatic involvement | |
| Unilobar | 91% |
| Bilobar | 9% |
| Extent of resection | |
| Wedge/segmentectomy | 58% |
| Lobectomy/extended lobectomy | 42% |
| Resection margin | |
| Negative | 85% |
| Positive | 15% |
| Peri-operative chemotherapy | 98% |
| Follow-up (mo) (median, range) | 49 (4.3–328) |
| Metastatic recurrence | 68% |
| Patterns of failure | |
| Liver only | 38% |
| Liver and lung | 34% |
| Other sites (e.g., peritoneum, bone, adrenal, brain) | 28% |
| Death event | 58% |
Clinical and pathological characteristics of patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer selected for study
Fig. 1Clinical outcomes following surgical resection of limited liver metastases from colorectal cancer. Kaplan–Meier curves of overall survival by a clinical recurrence status (as determined by post-operative surveillance CT imaging and serum CEA measurements) or b clinical risk scores (CRS) following hepatic resection of limited de novo CRCLM. Low CRS was defined as values less than two. P-values were determined using log-rank tests
Fig. 2Identification of intrinsic molecular subtypes of colorectal liver metastases. a Consensus molecular subtypes (CMS) of primary colorectal cancers obtained from the Colorectal Cancer Subtyping Consortium (CRCSC) or calculated in primary colorectal cancers of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). CMS subtypes were also determined in colorectal liver metastases from patients undergoing partial hepatectomy of resectable liver metastases (UC, NS, MSK1, and MSK2 cohorts) or biopsy of unresectable liver metastases (MSK3, Italian and French cohorts). Cohorts contain independent clinical and molecular datasets (see Supplementary Information). b Consensus clustering based on similarity network fusion (SNF) subtyping of colorectal liver metastases. Subtype 1 = S1, Subtype 2 = S2, Subtype 3 = S3. c Kaplan–Meier curves of overall survival by molecular subtype. P-value was determined using a log-rank test. d Metastatic recurrence patterns by molecular subtype. Asterisks denote statistical significance based on Fisher’s exact test for each subtype versus the two other subtypes. e Differentially expressed mRNAs (left) and miRNAs (right) between the three molecular subtypes (see Supplementary Data 2 and 3). Subtype 1 = red, Subtype 2 = green, Subtype 3 = blue
Fig. 3Molecular signatures of intrinsic subtypes of colorectal liver metastases. a Ensemble of gene set enrichment analyses (EGSEA) of significantly enriched “Hallmark” and “Cellular Estimate” gene signatures within each molecular subtype. Red color denotes enrichment, while blue color indicates depletion. Color intensity in EGSEA heatmaps is proportional to significance level (see Supplementary Data 4 and 5). Subtype 1 = red, Subtype 2 = green, Subtype 3 = blue. b Functional categorization of differentially expressed immune genes overexpressed in subtype 2. In heatmap red color denotes overexpression, while blue color indicates suppression. c OncoPrint plot of recurrent colorectal cancer mutations and copy number alterations by subtype. d Frequencies of subtype-specific genomic alterations. Asterisks denote statistical significance based on Fisher’s exact test comparing each subtype group to the two other subtypes. Subtype 1 = S1, Subtype 2 = S2, Subtype 3 = S3
Fig. 4Integration of intrinsic molecular subtypes and clinical risk stratification. a Kaplan–Meier curves of overall survival following initial hepatic resection of limited de novo CRCLM based on integrated risk classification of molecular subtype and clinical risk scores (CRS). P-value was determined using a log-rank test. b Metastatic recurrence patterns for integrated risk groups. Asterisks denote statistical significance based on Fisher’s exact test for each individual group versus the two additional groups. c Proposed classification of colorectal liver metastasis based on integrated molecular subtypes