Multi-organ landscape of therapy-resistant melanoma.
Sixue LiuPrashanthi DharanipragadaShirley H LomeliYan WangXiao ZhangZhentao YangRaymond J LimCamelia DumitrasPhilip O ScumpiaSteven M DubinettGatien MoriceauDouglas B JohnsonStergios J MoschosRoger S LoPublished in: Nature medicine (2023)
Metastasis and failure of present-day therapies represent the most common causes of mortality in patients with cutaneous melanoma. To identify the underlying genetic and transcriptomic landscapes, in this study we analyzed multi-organ metastases and tumor-adjacent tissues from 11 rapid autopsies after treatment with MAPK inhibitor (MAPKi) and/or immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) and death due to acquired resistance. Either treatment elicits shared genetic alterations that suggest immune-evasive, cross-therapy resistance mechanisms. Large, non-clustered deletions, inversions and inter-chromosomal translocations dominate rearrangements. Analyzing data from separate melanoma cohorts including 345 therapy-naive patients and 35 patients with patient-matched pre-treatment and post-acquired resistance tumor samples, we performed cross-cohort analyses to identify MAPKi and ICB as respective contributors to gene amplifications and deletions enriched in autopsy versus therapy-naive tumors. In the autopsy cohort, private/late mutations and structural variants display shifted mutational and rearrangement signatures, with MAPKi specifically selecting for signatures of defective homologous-recombination, mismatch and base-excision repair. Transcriptomic signatures and crosstalks with tumor-adjacent macroenvironments nominated organ-specific adaptive pathways. An immune-desert, CD8 + -macrophage-biased archetype, T-cell exhaustion and type-2 immunity characterized the immune contexture. This multi-organ analysis of therapy-resistant melanoma presents preliminary insights with potential to improve therapeutic strategies.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- healthcare
- dna damage
- single cell
- chronic kidney disease
- gene expression
- end stage renal disease
- hiv infected
- signaling pathway
- newly diagnosed
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- mesenchymal stem cells
- dna repair
- climate change
- artificial intelligence
- rna seq
- cardiovascular events
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- patient reported outcomes
- prognostic factors