Login / Signup

Tumor Immunophenotyping-Derived Signature Identifies Prognosis and Neoadjuvant Immunotherapeutic Responsiveness in Gastric Cancer.

Jia-Bin WangQing-Zhu QiuQiao-Ling ZhengYa-Jun ZhaoYu XuTao ZhangShuan-Hu WangQuan WangQin-Wen JinYin-Hua YePing LiJian-Wei XieJian-Xian LinJun LuQi-Yue ChenLong-Long CaoYing-Hong YangChao-Hui ZhengChang-Ming Huang
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
The effectiveness of neoadjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is confirmed in clinical trials; however, the patients suitable for receiving this therapy remain unspecified. Previous studies have demonstrated that the tumor microenvironment (TME) dominates immunotherapy; therefore, an effective TME classification strategy is required. In this study, five crucial immunophenotype-related molecules (WARS, UBE2L6, GZMB, BATF2, and LAG-3) in the TME are determined in five public gastric cancer (GC) datasets (n = 1426) and an in-house sequencing dataset (n = 79). Based on this, a GC immunophenotypic score (IPS) is constructed using the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) Cox, and randomSurvivalForest. IPS Low is characterized as immune-activated, and IPS High is immune-silenced. Data from seven centers (n = 1144) indicate that the IPS is a robust and independent biomarker for GC and superior to the AJCC stage. Furthermore, patients with an IPS Low and a combined positive score of ≥5 are likely to benefit from neoadjuvant anti-PD-1 therapy. In summary, the IPS can be a useful quantitative tool for immunophenotyping to improve clinical outcomes and provide a practical reference for implementing neoadjuvant ICI therapy for patients with GC.
Keyphrases