Abstract
BackgroundIntratumoural heterogeneity (ITH) is well recognised in prostate cancer (PC) but its role in high-risk disease is uncertain. A prospective single arm translational study using targeted multiregion prostate biopsies was performed to study genomic and T-cell ITH in clinically high-risk PC aiming to identify drivers and potential therapeutic strategies.Patients and methods49 men with elevated PSA and Multiparametric-Magnetic Resonance Imaging detected prostate cancer underwent image guided multiregion transperineal biopsy. 79 tumour regions from 25 patients with PC underwent sequencing, analysis of mutations, copy number and neoepitopes combined with tumour infiltrating T-cell subset quantification.ResultsWe demonstrated extensive somatic nucleotide variation (SNV) and somatic copy number alteration (SCNA) heterogeneity in high-risk PC. Overall the mutational burden was low (0.93/Megabase) but 2 patients had hypermutation, with loss of mismatch repair (MMR) proteins, MSH2 and MSH6. SCNA burden was higher in patients with metastatic hormone-naive PC (mHNPC) compared to high-risk localized PC (hrlPC), independent of Gleason grade. Mutations were rarely ubiquitous and mutational frequencies were similar for mHNPC and hrlPC patients. Enrichment of focal 3q26.2 and 3q21.3, regions containing putative metastasis drivers, was seen in mHNPC patients. We found evidence of parallel evolution with 3 separate clones containing activating mutations of β-catenin in a single patient. We demonstrated extensive intratumoral and intertumoral T-cell heterogeneity and high inflammatory infiltrate in the MMR deficient patients and the patient with parallel evolution of β-catenin. Analysis of all patients with activating Wnt/β-catenin mutations demonstrated a low CD8+/FOXP3+ ratio, a potential surrogate marker of immune evasion.ConclusionsThe PROGENY study provides a diagnostic platform suitable for studying tumour ITH. Genetic aberrations in clinically high-risk PC are associated with altered patterns of immune infiltrate in tumours. Activating mutations of Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway or MMRD could be considered as potential biomarkers for immunomodulation therapies.Clinical Trials.gov Identifier: NCT02022371http://ift.tt/2tGrGlb
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