Publication | Open Access
Immunological profiling of molecularly classified high-risk endometrial cancers identifies <i>POLE</i>-mutant and microsatellite unstable carcinomas as candidates for checkpoint inhibition
119
Citations
48
References
2016
Year
High-risk endometrial cancer (EC) is an aggressive disease for which new therapeutic options are needed. Aims of this study were to validate the enhanced immune response in highly mutated ECs and to explore immune profiles in other EC subgroups. We evaluated immune infiltration in 116 high-risk ECs from the TransPORTEC consortium, previously classified into four molecular subtypes: (i) ultramutated <i>POLE</i> exonuclease domain-mutant ECs (<i>POLE</i>-mutant); (ii) hypermutated microsatellite unstable (MSI); (iii) p53-mutant; and (iv) no specific molecular profile (NSMP). Within The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) EC cohort, significantly higher numbers of predicted neoantigens were demonstrated in <i>POLE</i>-mutant and MSI tumors compared with NSMP and p53-mutants. This was reflected by enhanced immune expression and infiltration in <i>POLE</i>-mutant and MSI tumors in both the TCGA cohort (mRNA expression) and the TransPORTEC cohort (immunohistochemistry) with high infiltration of CD8<sup>+</sup> (90% and 69%), PD-1<sup>+</sup> (73% and 69%) and PD-L1<sup>+</sup> immune cells (100% and 71%). Notably, a subset of p53-mutant and NSMP cancers was characterized by signs of an antitumor immune response (43% and 31% of tumors with high infiltration of CD8<sup>+</sup> cells, respectively), despite a low number of predicted neoantigens. In conclusion, the presence of enhanced immune infiltration, particularly high numbers of PD-1 and PD-L1 positive cells, in highly mutated, neoantigen-rich <i>POLE</i>-mutant and MSI endometrial tumors suggests sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitors.
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