| Literature DB >> 32997798 |
Yu Imamura1, Tasuku Toihata1,2, Ikumi Haraguchi3, Yoko Ogata2, Manabu Takamatsu4, Aya Kuchiba5, Norio Tanaka3, Osamu Gotoh3, Seiichi Mori3, Yuichiro Nakashima6, Eiji Oki6, Masaki Mori6, Yoshinao Oda7, Kenichi Taguchi8, Manabu Yamamoto9,10, Masaru Morita10, Naoya Yoshida2, Hideo Baba2, Shinji Mine1,11, Souya Nunobe1, Takeshi Sano1, Tetsuo Noda3, Masayuki Watanabe1.
Abstract
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is categorized by mutation frequency: high MSI (MSI-H), low MSI (MSI-L) and microsatellite stable (MSS). MSI-H tumors have a distinct immunogenic phenotype, with immunotherapies using checkpoint inhibitors already approved for the treatment of MSI-H gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA); this is not observed for MSI-L or MSS. Here, we tested the hypothesis that MSI-L tumors are also a distinct phenotype and potentially immunogenic. MSI-PCR assays (BAT25, BAT26, BAT40, D2S123, D5S346 and D17S250) were performed on 363 Epstein-Barr virus-negative, surgically resected esophagogastric junction (EGJ) adenocarcinoma samples. Tumors were characterized as MSI-H (≥2 markers), MSI-L (1 marker) or MSS (0 markers). CD8+ cell counts, PD-L1 and HER2 expression levels, TP53 mutations, epigenetic alterations and prognostic significance were also examined. All pathological and molecular experiments were conducted using serial, whole-tumor sections of chemo-naïve surgical specimens. MSI-H and MSI-L were assigned to 28 (7.7%) and 24 (6.6%) cases, respectively. Compared to MSS cases, MSI-L cases had significantly higher intratumoral CD8+ cell infiltration (P = .048) and favorable EGJ cancer-specific survival (multivariate hazard ratio = 0.35, 95% CI, 0.12-0.82; P = .012). MSI-L tumors were also significantly associated with TP53-truncating mutations as compared to MSI-H (P = .009) and MSS (P = .012) cases, and this trend was also observed in GEA data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Indel mutational burden among TCGA MSI-L tumors was significantly higher than that of MSS tumors (P = .016). These results suggest that MSI-L tumors may have a distinct tumor phenotype and be potentially immunogenic in EGJ adenocarcinoma.Entities:
Keywords: esophageal cancer; esophagus-gastric junction; immunotherapy; microsatellite instability; surgical oncology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32997798 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396