| Literature DB >> 35962345 |
Ida Deichaite1,2, Austin Hopper3, Hannah Carter4,5, Vitali Moiseenko3, Lena Krockenberger4, Timothy J Sears6, Leisa Sutton4, Xenia Ray3, Andrew Sharabi3,4, Ami Navon7, Parag Sanghvi3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Precision medicine incorporating genetic profiling is becoming a standard of care in medical oncology. However, in the field of radiation oncology there is limited use of genetic profiling and the impact of germline genetic biomarkers on radiosensitivity, radioresistance, or patient outcomes after radiation therapy is poorly understood. In HNSCC, the toxicity associated with treatment can cause delays or early cessation which has been associated with worse outcomes. Identifying potential biomarkers which can help predict toxicity, as well as response to treatment, is of significant interest.Entities:
Keywords: GEN1; Germline variants; HLA-A; Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; NCOR2; Predictive biomarkers of radiation toxicity; Radiogenomics; TET2; TSC2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35962345 PMCID: PMC9373374 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-022-03561-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 8.440
Patient characteristics
| Characteristics | Group A | Group B | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
| Age at diagnosis | |||
| < 65 | 10 (62.5) | 8 (44.4) | 18 (52.9) |
| ≥ 65 | 6 (37.5) | 10 (55.6) | 16 (47.1) |
| Gender | |||
| Male | 15 (93.8) | 16 (88.9) | 31 (91.2) |
| Female | 1 (6.2) | 2 (11.1) | 3 (8.8) |
| Smoking | |||
| ≤ 10 pack years | 11 (68.8) | 14 (77.8) | 25 (73.5) |
| > 10 pack years | 5 (31.2) | 4 (22.2) | 9 (26.5) |
| T stage | |||
| 0 | 1 (6.2) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (2.9) |
| 1 | 3 (18.8) | 3 (16.7) | 6 (17.6) |
| 2 | 5 (31.2) | 5 (27.8) | 10 (29.4) |
| 3 | 4 (25.0) | 3 (16.7) | 7 (20.6) |
| 4 | 3 (18.8) | 7 (38.9) | 10 (29.4) |
| N stage | |||
| 0 | 4 (25.0) | 3 (16.7) | 7 (20.6) |
| 1 | 4 (25.0) | 3 (16.7) | 7 (20.6) |
| 2 | 8 (50.0) | 6 (33.3) | 14 (41.2) |
| 3 | 0 (0.0) | 6 (33.3) | 6 (17.6) |
| Overall stage | |||
| I | 3 (18.8) | 2 (11.1) | 5 (14.7) |
| II | 1 (6.2) | 2 (11.1) | 3 (8.8) |
| III | 2 (12.5) | 2 (11.1) | 4 (11.8) |
| IVa | 8 (50.0) | 6 (33.3) | 14 (41.2) |
| IVb | 2 (12.5) | 6 (33.3) | 8 (23.5) |
| p16 status | |||
| Positive | 5 (31.2) | 8 (44.4) | 13 (38.2) |
| Negative | 7 (43.8) | 9 (50.0) | 16 (47.1) |
| Unknown | 4 (25.0) | 1 (5.6) | 5 (14.7) |
| Primary site | |||
| Oral cavity | 4 (25.0) | 6 (33.3) | 10 (29.4) |
| Oropharynx | 8 (50.0) | 7 (38.9) | 15 (44.1) |
| Larynx | 2 (12.5) | 3 (16.7) | 5 (14.7) |
| Hypopharynx | 0 (0.0) | 1 (5.6) | 1 (2.9) |
| Nasopharynx | 1 (6.2) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (2.9) |
| Nasal cavity | 0 (0.0) | 1 (5.6) | 1 (2.9) |
| Unknown | 1 (6.2) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (2.9) |
| Primary treatment | |||
| Definitive | 12 (75.0) | 8 (44.4) | 20 |
| Post-operative | 4 (25.0) | 10 (55.6) | 14 |
| Concurrent chemotherapy | |||
| Yes | 13 (81.2) | 14 (77.8) | 27 (79.4) |
| No | 3 (18.8) | 4 (22.2) | 7 (20.6) |
a3 patients were excluded from clinical analysis (one was treated palliatively and was metastatic at diagnosis, two had cutaneous SCC
Chi-square results: recurrent freebayes mutations expanded beyond tumor suppressors and oncogenes
Patients in Group A experienced a higher CTCAE grade for late dysphagia compared to their early dysphagia. Patients in Group B experienced the same or lower CTCAE grade for early and late dysphagia. The effect value > 1 is the odds ratio for increased proportion of germline variants in Group A
Fig. 1Structural HLA. A 3D structure of human HLA-A (609C) decorated by an epitope. B HLA-A wild type version (arginine to valine substitution). C HLA-A double mutant version (lysine to methionine substitution). D HLA-A double mutant version (lysine methionine) CPK presentation
P-values for PFS, LRR, MFS, and OS for patients with these variants vs. without
| Variant | PFS | LRR | MFS | OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TSC2 | 0.216 | 0.702 | 0.685 | |
| HLA-A V91Ma | 0.402 | 0.173 | 0.769 | 0.757 |
| HLA-A R68Ka | ||||
| FANCD2 | 0.774 | 0.448 | ||
| IFIT2 | 0.163 | 0.127 | 0.852 | 0.202 |
| GEN1 | 0.164 | 0.154 | 0.750 | 0.138 |
| NCOR2 | 0.712 | 0.564 | 0.660 | 0.503 |
| TET2 | 0.067* | 0.306 | 0.266 | 0.495 |
| MKI67 | 0.480 | 0.151 | 0.195 | |
| FANCI | 0.189 | 0.910 | 0.376 | 0.687 |
| RAD51D | 0.590 | 0.654 | 0.807 | 0.280 |
| IL10RA | 0.340 | 0.084 | 0.600 | 0.972 |
| IDH1 | 0.861 | 0.607 | 0.831 | 0.257 |
| HLA-F N353L | 0.266 | 0.901 | 0.262 | |
| FANCA V6Db | 0.157 | 0.270 | 0.722 | 0.839 |
| FANCA 5c | 0.346 | 0.623 | 0.244 | 0.070 |
| HLA-B Y140F | 0.283 | 0.165 | 0.123 | |
| HLA-DMA/B 5d | 0.456 | 0.966 | 0.213 | |
| DYNC2H1 Q304L | 0.531 | 0.773 | 0.245 | 0.120 |
| DYNC2H1 N1576K | 0.231 | 0.511 | 0.926 | 0.243 |
| PPP1R15A | 0.191 | 0.255 | ||
| SLX4 | 0.100 | 0.195 | 0.219 | 0.552 |
| HLA-DQA2 | 0.507 | 0.308 | 0.662 | 0.887 |
P-values with bold text are < 0.05 with the variant conferring improved outcomes, those with underline text are associated with worse outcomes, and those marked with an asterisk are approaching significance
aThese two variants appear together in the same group of patients
bOverlap with patients with MC1R R160W
cGroup of patients with the same 5 changes in FANCA
d5 HLA mutations present in the same group (HLA-DMB S71N, D49V, T28A and HLA-DMA R210H, G181A)
Chi-square results: recurrent freebayes mutations expanded beyond tumor suppressors and oncogenes
Patients in Group C experienced high toxicity for late dysphagia (CTCAE grade 2 +), while patients in Group D experienced a low toxicity for late dysphagia (CTCAE grade 0–1)
Fig. 2Bulk RNA-Seq derived variant allelic fraction (VAF) was generated for each variant and each patient. VAF values (y-axis) were compared against curated patient germline genotype values (x-axis) for each variant, where 0 = homozygous no variant, 1 = heterozygous variant, 2 = homozygous variant. Point color represents radiation toxicity group and point size represents total read depth at the variant locus of interest
Fig. 3Analysis of outcomes for Groups A and B by A OS, B PFS, C LFS and D MFS. Log-rank p-values are shown