| Literature DB >> 34354864 |
Masanori Oshi1,2, Tsutomu Kawaguchi1,3, Li Yan4, Xuan Peng4, Qianya Qi4, Wanqing Tian4, Amy Schulze1, Kerry-Ann McDonald1, Sumana Narayanan1, Jessica Young1,5, Song Liu4, Luc Gt Morris6,7, Timothy A Chan6,8,9,10,11, Pawel Kalinski12, Ryusei Matsuyama2, Eigo Otsuji3, Itaru Endo2, Kazuaki Takabe1,2,5,13,14,15.
Abstract
Evaluation of the functional aspects if the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME), such as the recently introduced cytolytic activity score (CYT) index have been under the spotlight in cancer research; however, clinical relevance of immune cell killing activity in breast cancer has never been analyzed in large patient cohorts. We hypothesized that CYT reflects the immune activity of TIME and can predict patient survival. A total of 7533 breast cancer patients were analyzed as both discovery and validation cohorts. We found that high CYT was associated with advanced histological grade and triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). High CYT in tumors was significantly associated with better survival in TNBC, but unexpectedly, not in other breast cancer subtypes. High CYT TNBC included both favorable immune-related, as well as unfavorable (suppressive) inflammation-related gene sets, and characterized by high infiltration with T cells and B cells. High CYT TNBC was associated with high homologous recombination deficiency and low somatic copy number alteration score and less mutant allele tumor heterogeneity, but not with tumor mutation burden (TMB). Although CYT was not associated with pathological complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, it was significantly associated with high expression of multiple immune checkpoint molecules. In conclusion, CYT of TNBC is associated with enhanced anti-cancer immunity, less intra-tumoral heterogeneity, and with better survival. AJCREntities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; CYT; TNBC; cytolytic activity; heterogeneity; immune cells; immune checkpoint inhibitor; mutation; transcriptome
Year: 2021 PMID: 34354864 PMCID: PMC8332854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cancer Res ISSN: 2156-6976 Impact factor: 5.942