Abstract 215P
Background
Dichotomizing tumors into tumor mutational burden (TMB)-high and TMB-low is common practice but may not determine which patients will benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). This study examines the impact of somatic mutations on overall survival (OS) for TMB-low metastatic cancer patients (MCP) treated with ICI.
Methods
Genomic (MSK-IMPACT) and clinical data from 1,172 TMB-low (<10mut/Mb) MCP were collected. OS accordingly to single-genemutations was assessed by Kaplan-Meier (KM) method. For genes exhibiting a correlation with OS, we conducted a Cox multivariate analysis (CMA) stratified by TMB, sex, age, microsatellite instability (MSI), and histology. KM and CMA were also performed to investigate the relation between insertions and deletions (InDels) and OS. Linear regression (LR) investigated the relation between TMB and InDels burden. Decision tree modeling (DTM) aimed to predict whether patients that received ICI harbored OS shorter or longer than the median OS of 15 months. The discriminative features (DF) for DTM were TMB (continuous), gene mutations, sex, and histology.
Results
Mutations in 25 genes were related to OS. CMA confirmed 9 genes associated with superior (VHL) and inferior (CTNNB1, DAXX, H3C2, HLA-A, IGF1R, KMT2D, SMARC4, TP53) OS (P < 0.05). MSI, age, and gender did not affect OS. Melanoma, bladder, and RCC endowed patients with better OS (P < 0.01). TMB and InDels exhibited a R-squared of 0.38 - low (or absent) relation. The InDels burden was unrelated to OS (P = 0.21). VHL mutation was a predictor of better OS in uni- and multivariate levels for RCC (N=149; P < 0.01). At DTM, RCC histology was the first DF (gini 0.492). For RCC patients, VHL mutation was the second (gini 0.349). For non-RCC patients, melanoma histology was the second. At the third layer, a TMB threshold of 5.095 mut/Mb for VHL wild-type patients and TP53 mutation for non-RCC and non-Melanoma patients were the following DF.
Conclusions
Tumor histology, mutated genes, and a better adjusted TMB cutoff (5.095 mut/Mb) are important for predicting ICI treatment outcomes in TMB-low patients. Among RCC patients, VHL mutations predict better OS. Individualized profiling is needed for a tailored ICI treatment strategy.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
155P - Exploring the utility of serum anti-tNASP antibodies as a screening biomarker in prostate, pancreatic, and ovarian cancer
Presenter: Oleg Alekseev
Session: Poster session 01
156P - The association between fibrotic endotypes, determined by pre-treatment serum levels of collagen metabolites, and survival outcomes in patients with pancreatic cancer
Presenter: Rasmus Pedersen
Session: Poster session 01
157P - CLDN18 fusions rather than expression is a biomarker related to the efficacy of paclitaxel in patients with ovarian metastasis of gastric cancer
Presenter: Pengfei Yu
Session: Poster session 01
158P - In silico analysis of HER2 enriched subtype and a HER2 index based on transcriptomic data of breast cancer compared to gastric and uterine serous carcinomas
Presenter: Arturo Gonzalez-Vilanova
Session: Poster session 01
159P - Better performance of pan-claudin18 antibodies on claudin18.2 detection in gastric adenocarcinoma than claudin18.2 specific antibody
Presenter: Shujuan NI
Session: Poster session 01
161P - Biomarkers of neoadjuvant combinational therapy for locally advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma
Presenter: Yue Wang
Session: Poster session 01
162P - MR imaging biomarkers profiles in patients with prostate cancer treated with androgen deprivation therapy
Presenter: Angel Luis Sanchez Iglesias
Session: Poster session 01
163P - Genomic alterations in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and response to ABBV-400 treatment in patients with advanced solid tumors
Presenter: Jair Bar
Session: Poster session 01
164P - Early evaluation of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of ctDNA-guided selection for adjuvant chemotherapy in stage II colon cancer
Presenter: Astrid Kramer
Session: Poster session 01