| Literature DB >> 31024913 |
Madison Canning1, Gang Guo2, Miao Yu2, Calvin Myint3, Michael W Groves3, James Kenneth Byrd3, Yan Cui2.
Abstract
Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) are highly aggressive, multi-factorial tumors in the upper aerodigestive tract affecting more than half a million patients worldwide each year. Alcohol, tobacco, and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection are well known causative factors for HNSCCs. Current treatment options for HNSCCs are surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combinatorial remedies. Over the past decade, despite the marked improvement in clinical outcome of many tumor types, the overall 5-year survival rate of HNSCCs remained ∼40-50% largely due to poor availability of effective therapeutic options for HNSCC patients with recurrent disease. Therefore, there is an urgent and unmet need for the identification of specific molecular signatures that better predict the clinical outcomes and markers that serve as better therapeutic targets. With recent technological advances in genomic and epigenetic analyses, our knowledge of HNSCC molecular characteristics and classification has been greatly enriched. Clinical and genomic meta-analysis of multicohort HNSCC gene expression profile has clearly demonstrated that HPV+ and HPV- HNSCCs are not only derived from tissues of different anatomical regions, but also present with different mutation profiles, molecular characteristics, immune landscapes, and clinical prognosis. Here, we briefly review our current understanding of the biology, molecular profile, and immunological landscape of the HPV+ and HPV- HNSCCs with an emphasis on the diversity and heterogeneity of HNSCC clinicopathology and therapeutic responses. After a review of recent advances and specific challenges for effective immunotherapy of HNSCCs, we then conclude with a discussion on the need to further enhance our understanding of the unique characteristics of HNSCC heterogeneity and the plasticity of immune landscape. Increased knowledge regarding the immunological characteristics of HPV+ and HPV- HNSCCs would improve therapeutic targeting and immunotherapy strategies for different subtypes of HNSCCs.Entities:
Keywords: checkpoint blockade; head and neck squamous cell carcinomas; heterogeneity; immune landscape; immunosuppression; immunosurveillance; neoantigen
Year: 2019 PMID: 31024913 PMCID: PMC6465325 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2019.00052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Causal, anatomical, gender, and racial diversities, clinicopathology, and survival of the HPV-positive and HPV-negative HNSCCs.
| Characteristic | Total number | HPV+ (%) | HPV- (%) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 76 | 4 (5) | 72 (95) | |
| Male | 203 | 32 (16) | 171 (84) | |
| Female∗ | 52 | 28 (54) | 24 (46) | |
| Male∗ | 271 | 178 (66) | 93 (34) | |
| Caucasian | 242 | 34 (14) | 208 (86) | |
| Non-Caucasian | 37 | 2 (5) | 35 (95) | |
| Caucasian∗ | 278 | 190 (68) | 88 (32) | |
| Non-Caucasian∗ | 45 | 16 (36) | 29 (64) | |
| Oropharynx | 33 | 22 (67) | 11 (33) | |
| Oral cavity | 172 | 12 (7) | 160 (93) | |
| Larynx | 72 | 1 (1) | 71 (99) | |
| Hypopharynx | 2 | 1 (50) | 1 (50) | |
| <20 | 15 | 14 (93) | 1 (7) | |
| >20 | 72 | 17 (24) | 55 (76) | |
| No alcohol use | 85 | 5 (6) | 80 (94) | |
| Alcohol use | 188 | 30 (16) | 158 (84) | |
| 0–15 months | 38(+)/58(-) | 37 (97) | 48 (83) | |
| 15–30 months | 38(+)/58(-) | 35 (92) | 36 (62) | |
| 60 months | 36(+)/243(-) | (∼55) | (∼40) | |
| 3-year overall survival∗ | 206(+)/117(-) | 165 (82.4%) | 51 (57.1%) | |
| 5-year overall survival∗ | 206(+)/117(-) | 73 (35.4%) | 22 (18.8%) |
Molecular landscapes that are impacted differentially in the HPV-positive and HPV-negative HNSCCs.
| Gene | Prevalence | Mutation/alteration in function | Cellular process | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80% | Viral oncogene | Cellular transformation; functional inhibition of p53/RB1 proteins | ||
| Rare | Low mutation rate, functional inactivation | HPV-driven | ||
| >50% | Amplification/mutation | AKT/mTOR pathway | ||
| 8/14% | Truncation/recurrent deletion | Uncontrolled | ||
| >10% | Alteration/oncogene fusion (FGFR3-TACC3) | Activation of the RTK (receptor tyrosine kinase) pathway | ||
| IMS subtype | Elevated levels of gene expression enhanced immune cell infiltration | CD8+ T and NK cell infiltration | ||
| ~86% common | Somatic mutations Chromosomal loss at 3p/17p | Tumor suppressor loss of function | ||
| Copy number alteration | Loss of TP53 function | |||
| CDKN2A/RBI | Very common | Chromosomal loss at 9p | Tumor suppressor loss of function | |
| 5–10% | Activating mutation | Constitutive activation of RAS pathway | ||
| Co-occurrence with | Inactivating mutation | Suppression of cell death | ||
| ~30% | Amplification | Activation of the RTK pathway | ||
| Common | Inactivating mutation/deletion | WNT/b-catenin signaling | ||
| Common | Mutation/deletion | Differentiation | ||
| Common | Gain of function | Differentiation | ||
| ~5% | Activating mutation | Oxidative stress |
FIGURE 1Schematic illustration of the cellular and molecular processes associated with innate and adaptive immunity mediated pathogen and tumor elimination.
FIGURE 2Schematic illustration of the co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory molecules involved in regulating T cell functional status of productive activation or tolerance/exhaustion.
FIGURE 3Schematic illustration of three outcomes of tumor immunosurveillance. (A) Tumors are eliminated by productive antitumor immunity of activated T cells and/or innate immune cells in the dominantly immunostimulatory TME. (B) Co-existence of activated immune cells that kill some of the tumor cells and ignorant/tolerant immune cells resulting in the survival of residual tumors and an overall tumor “dormancy.” (C) In the immunosuppressive TME, tumors and pro-inflammatory myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) induce T cell tolerance and prevent tumors being recognized by host immunity, thereby promoting tumor progression.
Immune landscapes of the HPV-positive and HPV-negative HNSCCs and clinical implications for targeted immunotherapy approaches.
| HPV (+) HNSCCs | HPV (-) HNSCCs | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall tumor infiltrating lymphocytes | Relative high numbers | ||
| Low numbers | |||
| Immune cells and phenotype | Increased CD4+CD25+ Tregs PD-1+ T cells and CD4+CD25+ Tregs | ||
| High CD56dim NK cells | |||
| Elevated PD-1 and CTLA4 on T cells | |||
| High CD56+CD3+ NKT cells | |||
| High PD-1+/TIM3+CD8+ T cells | Low PD-1+/TIM3+CD8+ cells | ||
| Clinical prognosis/responsiveness | |||
| Correlation between CD4+CD25+ Tregs and prognosis | Positive association | No correlation | |
| Better clinical outcome | Poor outcome | ||
| Overall immune landscape | Activated immune cell phenotype | ||
| Less immunosuppressive | Highly immunosuppressive | ||
| Mutation load/dominate antigens | Low mutation load | High mutation load | |
| HPV-associated antigens | Neoantigens | ||
| Clinical responses to checkpoint blockade | Higher response rate | Low response rate | |
| Good response rate only in tumors with high mutation load and CD8 T cells |