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Poster session 01

134P - TERT-associated DNA polymerases genes link CAF and CD8+ T cells to improve immunotherapy response rate across multiple cancers

Date

21 Oct 2023

Session

Poster session 01

Topics

Genetic and Genomic Testing

Tumour Site

Presenters

Zhiwen Luo

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 34 (suppl_2): S233-S277. 10.1016/S0923-7534(23)01932-4

Authors

Z. Luo1, Y. Xie2, Y. Deng1, Y. Che3, X. Bi2, H. Zhao1, X. Bi1

Author affiliations

  • 1 Department Of Hepatobiliary Surgery, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College - National Cancer Center, Cancer Hospital, 100021 - Beijing/CN
  • 2 Department Of Urology, National Cancer Center - Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, 100021 - Beijing/CN
  • 3 Thoracic Surgery, National Cancer Center/National Clinical Research Center for Cancer/Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, 100021 - Beijing/CN

Resources

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Abstract 134P

Background

Cancer cells exhibit heightened basal levels of responses to DNA breaks, accumulating DNA polymerases family (DNA-pol) as repair protein, thereby increasing DNA mutation and neoantigens. Based on this, we investigated the potential of DNA-pol as an immunotherapy biomarker and its underlying mechanism.

Methods

We conducted a pan-cancer analysis of DNA-pol gene dysregulation in 6366 samples. Normal fibroblast, cancer-associated fibroblast, and CD8+ T cells were cultured from cancer patients (3 esophagus, 5 lung, 5 renal, and 3 liver cancer), then treated them with PD-L1 inhibitor or overexpressing TERT for RNA-seq and proteomics. 996 multiple cancer cases with ICIs were collected to test biomarker efficiency. A phase II clinical trial is evaluating our biomarker prospectively.

Results

We defined a distinct signature score of DNA-pol genes upregulated in cancer (DNA-pol-up) and linked to worse prognosis (HR=1.2). DNA-pol-up program dysregulation led to immune processes alteration and was related to upstream activation of TERT signaling (z-score=3.6) in ingenuity pathway analysis and linked to immunologically active tumors by recruiting CD8+ T cell and downregulating CAF. DNA-pol-up score was elevated in PD-L1-treated CAF and TERT-overexpressed CD8+ T cell, in MSI-H cancer, also related to more neoepitope peptides, TMB (Rho=0.54), cancer stemness (Rho=0.78), and tumor purity (Rho=0.29). Cancers that activate this program carried distinct genomic profiles with PIK3CA, KRAS, and TP53 mutations. This signature was an independent predictor for ICIs response (OR=2.52), even outperforming cytolytic activity, MSI, TMB (OR=0.9). In 12 clinical trial datasets, this signature could stratify the responding patients (maxAUC=0.762). In our phase II clinical trial, 34 liver cancer were enrolled with 3-year follow-up, it also has a satisfactory performance in predicting the ORR (AUC=0.699) and classifies mortality rate (HR=2.3).

Conclusions

Our findings identify a distinct transcriptional pattern of DNA-pol genes across cancers, which highlighted the role of DNA-pol family genes in predicting the immunotherapy response for the first time, and TERT could be a novel vaccine candidate for improving immunotherapy response.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

X. Bi, H. Zhao, Z. Luo.

Funding

Zhiwen Luo was awarded a funding for research in Israel (China Scholarship Council No. 202106210312). CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (CIFMS) (2021-I2M-C&T-B-043, 2021-I2M-C&T-B-052); Beijing CSCO Clinical Oncology Research Foundation (Y-XD202001-0111, Y-2019AZMS-0082, Y-XD202002-0370).

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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