Litcius/Paper detail

Immunologic constant of rejection signature is prognostic in soft-tissue sarcoma and refines the CINSARC signature

François Bertucci, Vincent Niziers, Alexandre de Nonneville, Pascal Finetti, Léna Mescam, Olivier Mir, Antoîne Italiano, Axel Le Cesne, Jean‐Yves Blay, Michele Ceccarelli, Davide Bedognetti, Daniel Birnbaum, Émilie Mamessier

2022Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Soft-tissue sarcomas (STSs) are heterogeneous and aggressive tumors, with high metastatic risk. The immunologic constant of rejection (ICR) 20-gene signature is a signature of cytotoxic immune response. We hypothesized that ICR might improve the prognostic assessment of early-stage STS. METHODS: We retrospectively applied ICR to 1455 non-metastatic STS and searched for correlations between ICR classes and clinicopathological and biological variables, including metastasis-free survival (MFS). RESULTS: Thirty-four per cent of tumors were classified as ICR1, 27% ICR2, 24% ICR3, and 15% ICR4. These classes were associated with patients' age, pathological type, and tumor depth, and an enrichment from ICR1 to ICR4 of quantitative/qualitative scores of immune response. ICR1 class was associated with a 59% increased risk of metastatic relapse when compared with ICR2-4 class. In multivariate analysis, ICR classification remained associated with MFS, as well as pathological type and Complexity Index in Sarcomas (CINSARC) classification, suggesting independent prognostic value. A prognostic clinicogenomic model, including the three variables, was built in a learning set (n=339) and validated in an independent set (n=339), showing greater prognostic precision than each variable alone or in doublet. Finally, connectivity mapping analysis identified drug classes potentially able to reverse the expression profile of poor-prognosis tumors, such as chemotherapy and targeted therapies. CONCLUSION: ICR signature is independently associated with postoperative MFS in early-stage STS, independently from other prognostic features, including CINSARC. We built a robust prognostic clinicogenomic model integrating ICR, CINSARC, and pathological type, and suggested differential vulnerability of each prognostic group to different systemic therapies.

Topics & Concepts

PathologicalMedicineOncologySoft tissue sarcomaSarcomaMultivariate analysisInternal medicineStage (stratigraphy)ImmunohistochemistryMetastasisImmune systemPathologyCancerImmunologyBiologyPaleontologySarcoma Diagnosis and TreatmentCancer Research and TreatmentsImmunotherapy and Immune Responses