Signatures of tumour immunity distinguish Asian and non-Asian gastric adenocarcinomas

SJ Lin, JA Gagnon-Bartsch, IB Tan, S Earle, L Ruff… - Gut, 2015 - gut.bmj.com
SJ Lin, JA Gagnon-Bartsch, IB Tan, S Earle, L Ruff, K Pettinger, B Ylstra, N Van Grieken…
Gut, 2015gut.bmj.com
Objective Differences in gastric cancer (GC) clinical outcomes between patients in Asian
and non-Asian countries has been historically attributed to variability in clinical
management. However, recent international Phase III trials suggest that even with
standardised treatments, GC outcomes differ by geography. Here, we investigated gene
expression differences between Asian and non-Asian GCs, and if these molecular
differences might influence clinical outcome. Design We compared gene expression profiles …
Objective
Differences in gastric cancer (GC) clinical outcomes between patients in Asian and non-Asian countries has been historically attributed to variability in clinical management. However, recent international Phase III trials suggest that even with standardised treatments, GC outcomes differ by geography. Here, we investigated gene expression differences between Asian and non-Asian GCs, and if these molecular differences might influence clinical outcome.
Design
We compared gene expression profiles of 1016 GCs from six Asian and three non-Asian GC cohorts, using a two-stage meta-analysis design and a novel biostatistical method (RUV-4) to adjust for technical variation between cohorts. We further validated our findings by computerised immunohistochemical analysis on two independent tissue microarray (TMA) cohorts from Asian and non-Asian localities (n=665).
Results
Gene signatures differentially expressed between Asians and non-Asian GCs were related to immune function and inflammation. Non-Asian GCs were significantly enriched in signatures related to T-cell biology, including CTLA-4 signalling. Similarly, in the TMA cohorts, non-Asian GCs showed significantly higher expression of T-cell markers (CD3, CD45R0, CD8) and lower expression of the immunosuppressive T-regulatory cell marker FOXP3 compared to Asian GCs (p<0.05). Inflammatory cell markers CD66b and CD68 also exhibited significant cohort differences (p<0.05). Exploratory analyses revealed a significant relationship between tumour immunity factors, geographic locality-specific prognosis, and postchemotherapy outcomes.
Conclusions
Analyses of >1600 GCs suggest that Asian and non-Asian GCs exhibit distinct tumour immunity signatures related to T-cell function. These differences may influence geographical differences in clinical outcome, and the design of future trials particularly in immuno-oncology.
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