High familial burden of cancer correlates with improved outcome from immunotherapy in patients with NSCLC independent of somatic DNA damage response gene status.
Alessio CortelliniRaffaele GiustiMarco FilettiFabrizio CitarellaVincenzo AdamoDaniele SantiniSebastiano ButiOlga NigroLuca CantiniMassimo Di MaioJoachim G J V AertsEmilio BriaFederica BertoliniMiriam Grazia FerraraMichele GhidiniFrancesco GrossiAnnalisa GuidaRossana BerardiAlessandro MorabitoCarlo GenovaFrancesca MazzoniLorenzo AntonuzzoAlain GelibterPaolo MarchettiRita ChiariMarianna MacerelliFrancesca RastelliLuigi Della GravaraStefania GoriAlessandro TuziMichele De TursiPietro Di MarinoGiovanni MansuetoFederica PecciFederica ZorattoSerena RicciardiMaria Rita MigliorinoFrancesco PassigliaGiulio MetroGian Paolo SpinelliGiuseppe L BannaAlex FriedlaenderAlfredo AddeoCorrado FicorellaGiampiero PorzioMarcello TiseoMarco RussanoAlessandro RussoDavid James PinatoPublished in: Journal of hematology & oncology (2022)
Family history of cancer (FHC) is a hallmark of cancer risk and an independent predictor of outcome, albeit with uncertain biologic foundations. We previously showed that FHC-high patients experienced prolonged overall (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) following PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors. To validate our findings in patients with NSCLC, we evaluated two multicenter cohorts of patients with metastatic NSCLC receiving either first-line pembrolizumab or chemotherapy. From each cohort, 607 patients were randomly case-control matched accounting for FHC, age, performance status, and disease burden. Compared to FHC-low/negative, FHC-high patients experienced longer OS (HR 0.67 [95% CI 0.46-0.95], p = 0.0281), PFS (HR 0.65 [95% CI 0.48-0.89]; p = 0.0074) and higher disease control rates (DCR, 86.4% vs 67.5%, p = 0.0096), within the pembrolizumab cohort. No significant associations were found between FHC and OS/PFS/DCR within the chemotherapy cohort. We explored the association between FHC and somatic DNA damage response (DDR) gene alterations as underlying mechanism to our findings in a parallel cohort of 118 NSCLC, 16.9% of whom were FHC-high. The prevalence of ≥ 1 somatic DDR gene mutation was 20% and 24.5% (p = 0.6684) in FHC-high vs. FHC-low/negative, with no differences in tumor mutational burden (6.0 vs. 7.6 Mut/Mb, p = 0.6018) and tumor cell PD-L1 expression. FHC-high status identifies NSCLC patients with improved outcomes from pembrolizumab but not chemotherapy, independent of somatic DDR gene status. Prospective studies evaluating FHC alongside germline genetic testing are warranted.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- small cell lung cancer
- dna damage response
- copy number
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- risk factors
- genome wide
- dna repair
- stem cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- gene expression
- dna damage
- clinical trial
- papillary thyroid
- patient reported outcomes
- early onset
- cell cycle
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- cross sectional
- patient reported
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- tyrosine kinase
- squamous cell
- genome wide analysis