| Literature DB >> 32552802 |
Mayassa J Bou-Dargham1, Linlin Sha2, Qing-Xiang Amy Sang3,4, Jinfeng Zhang5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite recent advances in cancer immunotherapy, the efficacy of these therapies for the treatment of human prostate cancer patients is low due to the complex immune evasion mechanisms (IEMs) of prostate cancer and the lack of predictive biomarkers for patient responses.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Combination therapy; Immune evasion; Immunotherapy; Prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552802 PMCID: PMC7302357 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07058-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Immune cell abundance in the eight identified immune clusters. The distribution of lymphocyte abundance (A), cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) (B), regulatory T cells (Treg) (C), and total natural killer (NK) cells (D). The asterisks indicate statistical significance compared to the normal tissues (* p-value < 0.05; ** p-value < 0.01; *** p-value < 0.001)
The eight identified immune clusters in prostate cancer
| Genes | Number of Patients 430 (86.34%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | 232 | 129 (25.9%) |
| Cluster 2 | 314 | 44 (10.2%) |
| Cluster 3 | 276 | 52 (12.1%) |
| Cluster 4 | 129 | 56 (13.0%) |
| Cluster 5 | 116 | 43 (10.0%) |
| Cluster 6 | 27 | 49 (11.4%) |
| Cluster 7 | 111 | 28 (6.5%) |
| Cluster 8 | 52 | 29 (6.7%) |
The mechanisms of evasion in the identified prostate cancer clusters and the potential immunotherapies to circumvent immune evasion
| Cluster | Mechanism of Evasion | Potential Immunotherapies |
|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | Counterattack: DcR3 Ignorance | Anti-DcR3 Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
Cluster 2 (Gleason 7) | Impaired antigen presentation/low activation of CTL Tolerance: CTLA4, PD-1 Counterattack: DcR3 | Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines Anti-CTLA4, anti-PD-1 Anti-DcR3 |
Cluster 3 (Pathologic T3 & T4 Gleason score ≥ 8) | Tolerance: CTLA4, PD-1 Ignorance | Anti-CTLA4, anti-PD-1 Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
Cluster 4 (Gleason score ≥ 8) | Tolerance: CTLA4 Ignorance | Anti-CTLA4 Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
| Cluster 5 | Ignorance | Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
| Cluster 6 | Tolerance: CTLA4 Counterattack: DcR3 Ignorance | Anti-CTLA4 Anti-DcR3 Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
Cluster 7 (Gleason score 7) | Ignorance | Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
| Cluster 8 | CTLA4 Ignorance | Anti-CTLA4 Sipuleucel-T/DC-vaccines |
DcR3 Decoy receptor 3, DC dendritic cell, PD-1 programed cell death 1, CTLA4 cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated protein 4
Fig. 2The different IEMs in prostate cancer at different steps of the cancer-immunity cycle. After analyzing the levels of gene expression of immune-related genes in the clusters compared to adjacent normal samples, we identified the IEMs activated at different steps of the cancer-immunity cycle
Cluster association with the pathologic T stage
| Cluster | Number of patients | T1 | T2 | T3 | T4 | Fisher exact p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | 127 | 0 (0%) | 51 (40.16%) | 74 (58.27%) | 2 (1.57%) | 7.68E-01 |
| Cluster 2 | 44 | 0 (0%) | 23 (52.27%) | 21 (47.73%) | 0 (0%) | 1.38E-01 |
| Cluster 3 | 51 | 0 (0%) | 9 (17.65%) | 37 (72.55%) | 5 (9.80%) | 1.93E-03 |
| Cluster 4 | 56 | 0 (0%) | 16 (28.57%) | 39 (69.64%) | 1 (1.79%) | 4.00E-01 |
| Cluster 5 | 43 | 0 (0%) | 19 (44.19%) | 23 (53.49%) | 1 (2.33%) | 6.19E-01 |
| Cluster 6 | 48 | 0 (0%) | 16 (33.33%) | 32 (66.67%) | 0 (0%) | 6.34E-01 |
| Cluster 7 | 28 | 0 (0%) | 15 (53.57%) | 12 (42.86%) | 1 (3.57%) | 1.42E-01 |
| Cluster 8 | 28 | 0 (0%) | 8 (28.57%) | 19 (67.86%) | 1 (3.57%) | 4.70E-01 |
| Total | 425 | 0 (0%) | 183 (43.06%) | 256 (60.24%) | 12 (2.82%) |
Cluster association with the Gleason score
| Cluster | Number of patients | Gleason score ≤ 6 | Gleason score = 7 | Gleason score ≥ 8 | Fisher exact p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | 129 | 11 (8.53%) | 59 (45.74%) | 59 (45.74%) | 6.91E-01 |
| Cluster 2 | 44 | 4 (9.09%)’ | 34 (77.27%) | 6 (13.64%) | 3.52E-04 |
| Cluster 3 | 52 | 3 (5.77%) | 17 (32.69%) | 32 (61.54%) | 2.75E-02 |
| Cluster 4 | 56 | 1 (1.79%) | 24 (42.86%) | 31 (55.36%) | 4.24E-02 |
| Cluster 5 | 43 | 7 (16.28%) | 19 (44.19%) | 17 (39.53%) | 3.38E-01 |
| Cluster 6 | 49 | 9 (18.37%) | 19 (38.78%) | 21 (42.86%) | 1.26E-01 |
| Cluster 7 | 28 | 2 (7.15%) | 24 (85.71%) | 2 (7.14%) | 2.13E-04 |
| Cluster 8 | 29 | 4 (13.79%) | 15 (51.72%) | 10 (34.48%) | 6.12E-01 |
| Total | 430 | 41 (9.54%) | 211 (49.07%) | 178 (41.39%) |
Fig. 3Classification tree with 10 predictive biomarkers of patients’ immune evasion clusters (CL) and response to immunotherapy. Cluster of differentiation 48 (CD48), Speckled 140 KDa (SP140), Kin Of IRRE Like (KIRREL), Rho-Related GTP-Binding Protein RhoB (RHOB), F-Box Protein 17 (FBXO17), Anaphase Promoting Complex Subunit 1 (ANAPC1), Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), Suppressor Of Cytokine Signaling 3 (SOCS3), Arachidonate 15-Lipoxygenase (ALOX15), Ubiquitin Protein Ligase E3 Component N-Recognin 2 (UBR2)