Specific immune landscapes and immune checkpoint expressions in histotypes and molecular subtypes of sarcoma

A. Dufresne(Centre Léon Bérard), Tom Lesluyes(Université de Bordeaux), Christine Ménétrier‐Caux(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Mehdi Brahmi(Centre Léon Bérard), Élodie Darbo(Université de Bordeaux), Maud Toulmonde(Institut Bergonié), Antoîne Italiano(Institut Bergonié), Olivier Mir(Institut Gustave Roussy), A. Le Cesne(Institut Gustave Roussy), Sophie Le Guellec(Inserm), Thibaud Valentin(Inserm), Christine Chevreau(Institut Claudius Regaud), Sylvie Bonvalot(Institut Curie), Y Robin(Centre Oscar Lambret), Coindre Jm(Université de Bordeaux), Christophe Caux(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Jean‐Yves Blay(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Frédéric Chibon(Inserm)
OncoImmunology
January 1, 2020
Cited by 47Open Access
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Abstract

Soft tissue sarcomas are a group of rare and aggressive connective tissue neoplasms for which curative therapeutic opportunities are limited in advanced phase. Clinical trials assessing immunotherapy in these tumors have so far reported limited efficacy. The objective of this study is to provide a description of the immunologic landscape of sarcomas to guide the next clinical trials of immunotherapy in these diseases. The gene expression profile of 93 immune checkpoint (ICP) and membrane markers (MM) of immune cells was analyzed in a series of 253 soft tissue sarcoma (synovial sarcoma, myxoid liposarcoma, sarcoma with complex genomic and GIST) using Agilent Whole Human Genome Microarrays. The unsupervised hierarchical clustering of gene expression level was found able to properly group patients according to the histological subgroup of sarcoma, indicating that each sarcoma subgroup is associated with a specific immune signature defined by its gene expression pattern. Using the prognostic impact of CIBERSORT signature on metastatic-free survival in each subgroup, specific target could be proposed for each of the four groups: Treg through ICOS and GITR in GIST, M0 macrophages in all four sarcoma subtypes, OX40 in SS, CD40 in GIST and SS. The immune landscape of sarcoma was found to be as heterogeneous as the histotypes and molecular subtypes, but strongly correlated to the histotype. Histotype adapted immunotherapeutic approaches in each sarcoma subtypes must be considered in view of these results, consistently with the already reported specific response of histotypes of ICPs.


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