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Data from The Influence of Immune Heterogeneity on the Effectiveness of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in Multifocal Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Authors :
Sui Peng
Lixia Xu
Ming Kuang
Jun Yu
Lijian Liang
Baogang Peng
Dongming Li
Lujing Fang
Han Xiao
Xiaoxing Li
Yubin Xie
Shunli Shen
Heping Li
Yu Guo
Minghui He
Manling Huang
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose:Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy is emerging as the promising option for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. We aimed to investigate the heterogeneity of different tumor nodules of the same patient with multifocal hepatocellular carcinomas in response to immunotherapy and its molecular mechanisms.Experimental Design:We attained 45 surgical tumor samples including 33 small and 12 large nodules from 12 patients with multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma and evaluated genomic and immune heterogeneity among tumors through whole-genome sequencing and RNA sequencing. IHC was performed to validate the expression of immune markers. The responses to anti–programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) therapy in patients with multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma were evaluated.Results:The small and large tumors within the same patient presented with similar genomic characteristics, indicating their same genomic origin. We further found the small tumors had higher immune cell infiltration including more CD8+ T cells, M1 macrophages, and monocytes as compared with large tumors. Besides, the expression of interferon signature predictive of response to anti–PD-1 therapy was significantly upregulated in the small tumors. Moreover, the immune pathways were more vigorous along with less active proliferation pathways in the small tumors. In keeping with this, we found that small nodules were more sensitive to anti–PD-1 therapy than large nodules in patients with multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma.Conclusions:The small tumors in patients with multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma had higher immune cell infiltration and upregulation of immune pathways as compared with the large tumors, which can partially explain the different responses of small and large tumors in the same case to anti–PD-1 therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0de1e7e3fa7ec07e16f7b09749890c73