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Therapy-related transcriptional subtypes in matched primary and recurrent head and neck cancer

Authors :
Peter Weber
Axel Künstner
Julia Hess
Kristian Unger
Sebastian Marschner
Christian Idel
Julika Ribbat-Idel
Philipp Baumeister
Olivier Gires
Christoph Walz
Sibylle Rietzler
Laura Valeanu
Timm Herkommer
Lisa Kreutzer
Olena Klymenko
Guido Drexler
Thomas Kirchner
Cornelius Maihöfer
Ute Ganswindt
Axel Walch
Michael Sterr
Heiko Lickert
Martin Canis
Dirk Rades
Sven Perner
Mauricio Berriel Diaz
Stefan Herzig
Kirsten Lauber
Barbara Wollenberg
Hauke Busch
Claus Belka
Horst Zitzelsberger
Source :
Clin. Cancer Res. 28, 1038-1052 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Amer Assoc Cancer Research, 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: The genetic relatedness between primary and recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) reflects the extent of heterogeneity and therapy-driven selection of tumor subpopulations. Yet, current treatment of recurrent HNSCC ignores the molecular characteristics of therapy-resistant tumor populations. Experimental Design: From 150 tumors, 74 primary HNSCCs were RNA sequenced and 38 matched primary/recurrent tumor pairs were both whole-exome and RNA sequenced. Transcriptome analysis determined the predominant classical (CL), basal (BA), and inflamed-mesenchymal (IMS) transcriptional subtypes according to an established classification. Genomic alterations and clonal compositions of tumors were evaluated from whole-exome data. Results: Although CL and IMS subtypes were more common in primary HNSCC with low recurrence rates, the BA subtype was more prevalent and stable in recurrent tumors. The BA subtype was associated with a transcriptional signature of partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (p-EMT) and early recurrence. In 44% of matched cases, the dominant subtype changed from primary to recurrent tumors, preferably from IMS to BA or CL. Expression analysis of prognostic gene sets identified upregulation of hypoxia, p-emt, and radiotherapy resistance signatures and downregulation of tumor inflammation in recurrences compared with index tumors. A relevant subset of primary/recurrent tumor pairs presented no evidence for a common clonal origin. Conclusions: Our study showed a high degree of genetic and transcriptional heterogeneity between primary/recurrent tumors, suggesting therapy-related selection of a transcriptional subtype with characteristics unfavorable for therapy. We conclude that therapy decisions should be based on genetic and transcriptional characteristics of recurrences rather than primary tumors to enable optimally tailored treatment strategies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clin. Cancer Res. 28, 1038-1052 (2022)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce40f7b980fadb86885c12783f8b2d34