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Non-driver somatic alteration burden confers good prognosis in non-small cell lung cancer

Authors :
Chang-Qi Zhu
Frances A. Shepherd
Jonathan Chang
Pasko E
Raghavan
Timothy M. Freeman
Michael F. Moran
Melania Pintilie
Dennis Wang
Ming-Sound Tsao
Jiefei Tong
Nhu-An Pham
Dalam Ly
Bradly G. Wouters
Roya Navab
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

BackgroundGenomic profiling of patient tumors has linked somatic driver mutations to survival outcomes of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, especially for those receiving targeted therapies. However, it remains unclear whether specific non-driver mutations have any prognostic utility.MethodsWhole exomes and transcriptomes were measured from NSCLC xenograft models of patients with diverse clinical outcomes. Penalised regression analysis was performed to identify a set of 865 genes associated with patient survival. The number of somatic copy number aberrations, point mutations and associated expression changes within the 865 genes were used to stratify independent NSCLC patient populations, filtered for chemotherapy naive and early-stage. In-depth genomic analysis and functional testing was conducted on the genomic alterations to understand their effect on improving survival.ResultsHigh burden of somatic alterations are associated with longer disease-free survival (HR=0.153, P=1.48×10-4) in NSCLC patients. When somatic alterations burden was integrated with gene expression, we were able to predict prognosis in three independent patient datasets. Patients with high alteration burden could be further stratified based on the presence of immunogenic mutations, revealing another subgroup of patients with even better prognosis (85% with >5 years survival), and associated with cytotoxic T-cell expression. In addition, 95% of these 865 genes lack documented activity relevant to cancer, but are in pathways regulating cell proliferation, motility and immune response were implicated.ConclusionOur results demonstrate that non-driver somatic alterations may influence the outcome of cancer patients by increasing beneficial immune response and inhibiting processes associated to tumorigenesis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....000376140ad88faac33adc651ad3756f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/419424