Molecular correlates of cisplatin-based chemotherapy response in muscle invasive bladder cancer by integrated multi-omics analysis

Ann Taber(Aarhus University), Emil Christensen(Aarhus University), Philippe Lamy(Aarhus University Hospital), Iver Nordentoft(Aarhus University Hospital), Frederik Prip(Aarhus University), Sia V. Lindskrog(Aarhus University), Karin Birkenkamp‐Demtröder(Aarhus University), Trine Line Hauge Okholm(Aarhus University), Michael Knudsen(Aarhus University Hospital), Jakob Skou Pedersen(Aarhus University), Torben Steiniche(Aarhus University Hospital), Mads Agerbæk(Aarhus University Hospital), Jørgen Bjerggaard Jensen(Aarhus University), Lars Dyrskjøt(Aarhus University)
Nature Communications
September 25, 2020
Cited by 215Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Overtreatment with cisplatin-based chemotherapy is a major issue in the management of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), and currently none of the reported biomarkers for predicting response have been implemented in the clinic. Here we perform a comprehensive multi-omics analysis (genomics, transcriptomics, epigenomics and proteomics) of 300 MIBC patients treated with chemotherapy (neoadjuvant or first-line) to identify molecular changes associated with treatment response. DNA-based associations with response converge on genomic instability driven by a high number of chromosomal alterations, indels, signature 5 mutations and/or BRCA2 mutations. Expression data identifies the basal/squamous gene expression subtype to be associated with poor response. Immune cell infiltration and high PD-1 protein expression are associated with treatment response. Through integration of genomic and transcriptomic data, we demonstrate patient stratification to groups of low and high likelihood of cisplatin-based response. This could pave the way for future patient selection following validation in prospective clinical trials.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis