학술논문

Immune-based classification of HPV-associated oropharyngeal cancer with implications for biomarker-driven treatment de-intensification
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Immunology
Cancer
Prevention
Infectious Diseases
Precision Medicine
Radiation Oncology
Digestive Diseases
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Papillomavirus Infections
Retrospective Studies
Neoplasm Recurrence
Local
Oropharyngeal Neoplasms
Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck
Prognosis
Biomarkers
Human Papillomavirus Viruses
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Papillomaviridae
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
Transcriptomics
Cancer immunology
HPV
De-escalation
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Clinical sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThere is significant interest in treatment de-escalation for human papillomavirus-associated (HPV+) oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) patients given the generally favourable prognosis. However, 15-30% of patients recur after primary treatment, reflecting a need for improved risk-stratification tools. We sought to develop a molecular test to risk stratify HPV+ OPSCC patients.MethodsWe created an immune score (UWO3) associated with survival outcomes in six independent cohorts comprising 906 patients, including blinded retrospective and prospective external validations. Two aggressive radiation de-escalation cohorts were used to assess the ability of UWO3 to identify patients who recur. Multivariate Cox models were used to assess the associations between the UWO3 immune class and outcomes.FindingsA three-gene immune score classified patients into three immune classes (immune rich, mixed, or immune desert) and was strongly associated with disease-free survival in six datasets, including large retrospective and prospective datasets. Pooled analysis demonstrated that the immune rich group had superior disease-free survival compared to the immune desert (HR = 9.0, 95% CI: 3.2-25.5, P = 3.6 × 10-5) and mixed (HR = 6.4, 95% CI: 2.2-18.7, P = 0.006) groups after adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, and AJCC8 clinical stage. Finally, UWO3 was able to identify patients from two small treatment de-escalation cohorts who remain disease-free after aggressive de-escalation to 30 Gy radiation.InterpretationWith additional prospective validation, the UWO3 score could enable biomarker-driven clinical decision-making for patients with HPV+ OPSCC based on robust outcome prediction across six independent cohorts. Prospective de-escalation and intensification clinical trials are currently being planned.FundingCIHR, European Union, and the NIH.