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Genome-wide methylation patterns predict clinical benefit of immunotherapy in lung cancer

Jeong Yeon Kim, Jung Kyoon Choi, Hyunchul Jung

2020Clinical Epigenetics156 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is crucial to unravel molecular determinants of responses to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy because only a small subset of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients responds to ICB therapy. Previous studies were concentrated on genomic and transcriptomic markers (e.g., mutation burden and immune gene expression). However, these markers are not sufficient to accurately predict a response to ICB therapy. RESULTS: Here, we analyzed DNA methylomes of 141 advanced NSCLC samples subjected to ICB therapy (i.e., anti-programmed death-1) from two independent cohorts (60 and 81 patients from our and IDIBELL cohorts). Integrative analysis of patients with matched transcriptome data in our cohort (n = 28) at pathway level revealed significant overlaps between promoter hypermethylation and transcriptional repression in nonresponders relative to responders. Fifteen immune-related pathways, including interferon signaling, were identified to be enriched for both hypermethylation and repression. We built a reliable prognostic risk model based on eight genes using LASSO model and successfully validated the model in independent cohorts. Furthermore, we found 30 survival-associated molecular interaction networks, in which two or three hypermethylated genes showed significant mutual exclusion across nonresponders. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates that methylation patterns can provide insight into molecular determinants underlying the clinical benefit of ICB therapy.

Topics & Concepts

DNA methylationLung cancerImmunotherapyTranscriptomeImmune checkpointBiologyOncologyProportional hazards modelMethylationGeneCancerBioinformaticsCancer researchMedicineInternal medicineGeneticsGene expressionCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersFerroptosis and cancer prognosisEpigenetics and DNA Methylation