The mutational pattern of homologous recombination-related (HRR) genes in Chinese colon cancer and its relevance to immunotherapy responses.

Journal: Aging
Published:
Abstract

Background: Microsatellite-stable (MSS) colon adenocarcinoma (COAD) patients are not sensitive to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Here, we focused on analyzing the relationship between homologous recombination repair (HRR)-related gene mutations and clinical immunotherapy responses in MSS COAD.

Methods: The mutational landscape was profiled in a cohort of 406 Chinese COAD patients via next-generation sequencing (NGS). Correlations between HRR gene mutations and tumor immunity or clinical outcomes in two COAD genomic datasets were analyzed via bioinformatics.

Results: In the Chinese cohort, seventy (17%) patients exhibited genomic alterations in HRR genes; ATM (9%), BRCA2 (4%), ATR (3%), RAD50 (3%) and BRIP1 (3%) were the most frequently mutated. In the MSK-IMPACT COAD cohort (immune checkpoint inhibitor-treated), HRR-mut patients (n=34) survived longer than HRR-wt patients (n=50) (log-rank P < 0.01). Based on the TCGA MSS COAD cohort, HRR gene mutations increased immune activities, such as infiltration of cytotoxic cells (P < 0.05) and exhausted CD8+ T cells (P < 0.01), and increased the IFN-γ scores (P < 0.05). The results differed in MSI-H COAD patients (all P > 0.05).

Conclusion: HRR gene mutations significantly increased immune activities in MSS COAD patients, implying the feasibility of the HRR-mut status as an immunotherapy response predictor in MSS COAD.

Authors
Pei Zhou, Xueying Wu, Huan Chen, Ying Hu, Henghui Zhang, Lijia Wu, Ying Yang, Beibei Mao, Huaqing Wang
Relevant Conditions

Colorectal Cancer