Japanese journal of clinical oncology | 2021

Patterns of immune infiltration in gastric cancer and their clinical significance.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


OBJECTIVE\nThe malignant phenotypes of cancer are defined not only by its intrinsic tumor cells but also by the tumor-infiltrating immune cells activated and recruited to the cancer microenvironment. However, a comprehensive introduction of gastric cancer immune cell infiltration has not been identified so far.\n\n\nMETHODS\nIn this study, we comprehensively analyzed the tumor-infiltrating immune cells abundance in gastric cancer for the first time by CIBERSORT. The meta-analysis, single-sample gene set enrichment analysis and hierarchical agglomerative clustering were used to measure and evaluate the respective proportions of 22 cell types of immune infiltration using normalized gene expression data. The fraction of tumor-infiltrating immune cells subpopulations was also evaluated to determine the associations with clinical features and molecular subtypes.\n\n\nRESULTS\nTumor-infiltrating immune cells are extensively involved in the pathogenesis and development of the gastric cancer. We discovered Tfh and activated CD4+ memory T cells were associated with poorer overall survival and Progression-free survival (PFS), but that naïve B cells were opposite for PFS. Unsupervised clustering analysis revealed there existed three tumor-infiltrating immune cells subgroups with distinct survival patterns. Specially, cluster 1 showed significantly better clinical outcome than other two clusters.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nCollectively, our data explored the differences of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in gastric cancer, and these variations were likely to be important clues for prognosis and management of its future clinical implementation.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/jjco/hyab054
Language English
Journal Japanese journal of clinical oncology

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