JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Correlate tumor mutation burden with immune signatures in human cancers.

BMC Immunology 2019 January 12
BACKGROUND: Tumor mutation burden (TMB) has been associated with cancer immunotherapeutic response and cancer prognosis. Although many explorations have revealed that high TMB may yield many neoantigens to incite antitumor immune response, a systematic exploration of the correlation between TMB and immune signatures in different cancer types is lacking.

RESULTS: We classified cancer into the lower-TMB subtype and the higher-TMB subtype for each of 32 cancer types based on their somatic mutation data from the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), and compared the expression levels of immune-related genes and gene-sets between both subtypes of cancers in each cancer type. In some cancer types most of the immune signatures analyzed were upregulated in the lower-TMB subtype, while in some other cancer types the immune signatures were prone to be upregulated in the higher-TMB subtype. However, the regulatory T cells, immune cell infiltrate, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, and cytokine signatures tended to be upregulated in the lower-TMB subtype, and the cancer-testis antigen (CTA) and pro-inflammatory signatures were inclined to be upregulated in the higher-TMB subtype. Importantly, high TMB was associated with elevated expression of PD-L1 in diverse prevailing cancers. Furthermore, we found that higher TMB was associated with better survival prognosis in numerous cancer types while was associated with worse prognosis in a few cancer types.

CONCLUSIONS: High TMB may inhibit immune cell infiltrations while promote CTAs expression and inflammatory response in cancer. In many common cancer types, higher TMB may respond favorably to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 immunotherapy. Our data implicate that higher-TMB patients could gain a more favorable prognosis in diverse cancer types if treated with immunotherapy, otherwise would have a poorer prognosis compared to lower-TMB patients.

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