Developing an immune signature for triple-negative breast cancer to predict prognosis and immune checkpoint inhibitor response.
Ce WangGuoshuang FengJingjing ZhuKecheng WeiChen HuangZhenyu WuYongfu YuGuo-You QinPublished in: Future oncology (London, England) (2022)
Aim: We aimed to develop a new signature based on immune-related genes to predict prognosis and response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Materials & methods: Single-sample gene set enrichment was used to develop an immune-based prognostic signature (IPRS) for TNBC patients. We conducted multivariate Cox analysis to evaluate the prognosis value of the IPRS. Result: An IPRS based on 66 prognostic genes was developed. Multivariate Cox analysis indicated that the IPRS was an independent factor for prognosis. PD-1 , PD-L1 , PD-L2 and CTLA4 gene expression was higher in the low-risk group, suggesting IPRS could predict the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Conclusion: The IPRS might be a reliable signature to predict TNBC patients' prognosis and response to immune checkpoint inhibitors, but needs prospective validation.