Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2021

Clinical Implications of Inter- and Intra-Tumor Heterogeneity of Immune Cell Markers in Lung Cancer.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nImmune cell transcriptome signatures have been widely used to study the lung tumor microenvironment (TME). However, it is unclear to what extent the immune cell composition in the lung TME varies across histological and molecular subtypes (inter-tumor heterogeneity or Inter-TH) and within tumors (intratumor heterogeneity or ITH), and whether ITH has any prognostic relevance.\n\n\nMETHODS\nUsing RNA sequencing in 269 tumor samples from 160 lung cancer patients we quantified the Inter-TH of immune gene expression and immune cell abundance and evaluated the association of median immune cell abundance with clinical/pathological features and overall survival. In 39 tumors with 132 multi-region samples, we also analyzed the ITH of immune cell abundance in relation to overall survival using a variance-weighted multivariate Cox model not biased by the number of samples per tumor.\n\n\nRESULTS\nSubstantial Inter-TH of 14 immune cell types was observed even within the same histological and molecular subtypes, but early-stage tumors had higher lymphocyte infiltration across all tumor types. In multi-region samples, an unbiased estimate of low ITH of overall immune cell composition (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.40, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.21 to 0.78; P\u2009=\u2009.007), dendritic cells (HR\u2009=\u20090.24, 95% CI\u2009=\u20090.096 to 0.58; P\u2009=\u2009.002) and macrophages (HR\u2009=\u20090.50, 95% CI\u2009=\u20090.30 to 0.84; P\u2009=\u2009.009) was strongly associated with poor survival. The ITH of three markers, including CD163 and CD68 (macrophages) and CCL13 (dendritic cells), was enough to characterize the ITH of the corresponding immune cell abundances and its association with overall survival.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nThis study suggests that lack of immune cell diversity may facilitate tumor evasion and progression. ITH inferred from CCL13, CD163 and CD68 could be used as a prognostic tool in clinical practice.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/jnci/djab157
Language English
Journal Journal of the National Cancer Institute

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