Publication | Open Access
Sex-associated molecular differences for cancer immunotherapy
233
Citations
26
References
2020
Year
Cancer ImmunosurveillanceMedicineSex BiasImmunologyImmunoeditingPathologyImmune FeaturesImmune Checkpoint InhibitorCancer GenomicsSex-associated Molecular DifferencesImmunotherapyOncologyCancer ResearchTumor MicroenvironmentTumor BiologyMolecular Profiling
Immune checkpoint blockade therapies have extended patient survival across multiple cancer lineages, but there is a heated debate on whether cancer immunotherapy efficacy is different between male and female patients. We summarize the existing meta-analysis to show inconsistent conclusions for whether gender is associated with the immunotherapy response. We analyze molecular profiling from ICB-treated patients to identify molecular differences for immunotherapy responsiveness. We perform comprehensive analyses for patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and reveal divergent patterns for sex bias in immune features across multiple cancer types. We further validate our observations in multiple independent data sets. Considering that the majority of clinical trials are in melanoma and lung cancer, meta-analyses that pool multiple cancer types have limitations to discern whether cancer immunotherapy efficacy is different between male and female patients. Future studies should include omics profiling to investigate sex-associated molecular differences in immunotherapy.
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