Vienna, Austria

ESTRO 2023

Session Item

Saturday
May 13
10:30 - 11:30
Schubert
Biomarkers and prediction models
Anna Dubrovska, Germany;
Eric Fong, Australia
Proffered Papers
Interdisciplinary
11:10 - 11:20
An immune gene expression risk score for distant metastases after radiotherapy for cervical cancer
Jelena Lukovic, Canada
OC-0091

Abstract

An immune gene expression risk score for distant metastases after radiotherapy for cervical cancer
Authors:

Jelena Lukovic1, Melania Pintilie2, Kathy Han1, Jeffrey Bruce1, Rene Quevedo1, Trevor Pugh3, Christina S Fjeldbo4, Heidi Lyng4, Michael Milosevic1

1Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Radiation Medicine Program, Toronto, Canada; 2Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Biostatistics, Toronto, Canada; 3University of Toronto, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Department of Medical Biophysics, Toronto, Canada; 4Norwegian Radium Hospital, Department of Radiation Biology, Oslo, Norway

Show Affiliations
Purpose or Objective

Cervical cancer radiotherapy (RT) dose intensification with image guided interstitial brachytherapy (BT) has yielded excellent local control rates of 90% or higher. A high proportion of patients, however, develop distant metastases and die. Clinical trials of chemotherapy or molecular therapeutics have failed, in part because high risk patients cannot reliably be identified, and the drivers of metastases are poorly understood. To address this, we developed and validated an immune-based gene expression risk score for distant metastases after curative-intent treatment with RT/cisplatin.

Material and Methods

Tumor biopsies were obtained from 81 cervical cancer patients at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre prior to external beam RT/cisplatin and 2D BT with long-term follow-up and recording of sites of recurrence. Shallow whole genome DNA sequencing was performed for copy number alterations (CNA). Whole genome RNA sequencing was performed using an Illumina NextSeq500. Beginning with 4,723 immune-related genes, a 55 gene risk score for distant metastases was derived using Cox modelling and principal component analysis. It was validated in independent cohorts of 274 patients from the Norwegian Radium Hospital (NRH) and 206 patients from TCGA.

Results

The 55 gene risk score was strongly predictive of distant metastatic recurrence (HR 2.7, p<0.0001) and lower cause specific survival (CSS) by univariate analysis (HR 2.0, p=0.0003). Similar results were seen (distant metastases HR 3.0, p<0.0001; CSS HR 2.2, p=0.0004) on multivariate analysis adjusted for clinical prognostic factors. The risk score validated as a predictor of distant metastatic recurrence (HR 1.4, p=0.05) and CSS (HR 1.48, p=0.013) in the NRH cohort and CSS (HR 1.4, p=0.03) in the TCGA cohort (sites of recurrence not available). There was no relationship with local recurrence. Higher risk scores were associated with higher CNA determined independently by DNA sequencing (p=0.001) and lower CIBERSORT estimates of tumor infiltrating immune cells, including CD8 T-cells and M1 and M2 macrophages (all p<0.001). Higher risk scores were also associated with lower expression (all p<0.001) of important chemokines (CXCL12, CXCR4), interferon regulated genes (IRF1, STAT1, IDO1) and immune checkpoint regulators (PD-1, PD-L1, CTLA-4).

Conclusion

The immune gene expression risk score addresses important clinical challenges in the treatment of cervical cancer – identifying patients at high risk of distant metastatic recurrence after RT and potential targets for mitigating this risk. The findings of this study indicate that high tumor mutational burden and an immune suppressed tumor microenvironment influence distant metastatic recurrence but not local recurrence, suggesting different biologic mechanisms for these two endpoints. Further validation of the risk score is require in a prospective clinical trial.