| Literature DB >> 33482121 |
Carl M Gay1, C Allison Stewart1, Elizabeth M Park1, Lixia Diao2, Sarah M Groves3, Simon Heeke1, Barzin Y Nabet4, Junya Fujimoto5, Luisa M Solis5, Wei Lu5, Yuanxin Xi2, Robert J Cardnell1, Qi Wang2, Giulia Fabbri6, Kasey R Cargill1, Natalie I Vokes1, Kavya Ramkumar1, Bingnan Zhang1, Carminia M Della Corte7, Paul Robson8, Stephen G Swisher9, Jack A Roth9, Bonnie S Glisson1, David S Shames4, Ignacio I Wistuba5, Jing Wang2, Vito Quaranta3, John Minna10, John V Heymach1, Lauren Averett Byers11.
Abstract
Despite molecular and clinical heterogeneity, small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is treated as a single entity with predictably poor results. Using tumor expression data and non-negative matrix factorization, we identify four SCLC subtypes defined largely by differential expression of transcription factors ASCL1, NEUROD1, and POU2F3 or low expression of all three transcription factor signatures accompanied by an Inflamed gene signature (SCLC-A, N, P, and I, respectively). SCLC-I experiences the greatest benefit from the addition of immunotherapy to chemotherapy, while the other subtypes each have distinct vulnerabilities, including to inhibitors of PARP, Aurora kinases, or BCL-2. Cisplatin treatment of SCLC-A patient-derived xenografts induces intratumoral shifts toward SCLC-I, supporting subtype switching as a mechanism of acquired platinum resistance. We propose that matching baseline tumor subtype to therapy, as well as manipulating subtype switching on therapy, may enhance depth and duration of response for SCLC patients.Entities:
Keywords: ASCL1; EMT; NEUROD1; POU2F3; SCLC; intratumoral heterogeneity; neuroendocrine
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33482121 PMCID: PMC8143037 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.12.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743