| Literature DB >> 33157048 |
Robert J Motzer1, Romain Banchereau2, Habib Hamidi2, Thomas Powles3, David McDermott4, Michael B Atkins5, Bernard Escudier6, Li-Fen Liu2, Ning Leng2, Alexander R Abbas2, Jinzhen Fan2, Hartmut Koeppen2, Jennifer Lin2, Susheela Carroll7, Kenji Hashimoto8, Sanjeev Mariathasan2, Marjorie Green2, Darren Tayama2, Priti S Hegde9, Christina Schiff2, Mahrukh A Huseni10, Brian Rini11.
Abstract
Integrated multi-omics evaluation of 823 tumors from advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients identifies molecular subsets associated with differential clinical outcomes to angiogenesis blockade alone or with a checkpoint inhibitor. Unsupervised transcriptomic analysis reveals seven molecular subsets with distinct angiogenesis, immune, cell-cycle, metabolism, and stromal programs. While sunitinib and atezolizumab + bevacizumab are effective in subsets with high angiogenesis, atezolizumab + bevacizumab improves clinical benefit in tumors with high T-effector and/or cell-cycle transcription. Somatic mutations in PBRM1 and KDM5C associate with high angiogenesis and AMPK/fatty acid oxidation gene expression, while CDKN2A/B and TP53 alterations associate with increased cell-cycle and anabolic metabolism. Sarcomatoid tumors exhibit lower prevalence of PBRM1 mutations and angiogenesis markers, frequent CDKN2A/B alterations, and increased PD-L1 expression. These findings can be applied to molecularly stratify patients, explain improved outcomes of sarcomatoid tumors to checkpoint blockade versus antiangiogenics alone, and develop personalized therapies in RCC and other indications.Entities:
Keywords: CDKN2A/B; PBRM1; PD-L1; VHL; atezolizumab; bevacizumab; checkpoint blockade; integrated genomics; renal cell carcinoma; sarcomatoid; sunitinib
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33157048 PMCID: PMC8436590 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.10.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743