Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy

Non-small cell lung cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in the world. Lung adenocarcinoma, the most common type of non-small cell lung cancer, has been well characterized as having a dense lymphocytic infiltrate, suggesting that the immune system plays an active role in shapi...

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Main Authors: Frederick S. Varn, Laura J. Tafe, Christopher I. Amos, Chao Cheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-06-01
Series:OncoImmunology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2018.1431084
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spelling doaj-e6e3f5e8676d41aeaf0c57677238a50b2020-11-25T02:53:20ZengTaylor & Francis GroupOncoImmunology2162-402X2018-06-017610.1080/2162402X.2018.14310841431084Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapyFrederick S. Varn0Laura J. Tafe1Christopher I. Amos2Chao Cheng3Geisel School of Medicine at DartmouthGeisel School of Medicine at DartmouthNorris Cotton Cancer CenterGeisel School of Medicine at DartmouthNon-small cell lung cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in the world. Lung adenocarcinoma, the most common type of non-small cell lung cancer, has been well characterized as having a dense lymphocytic infiltrate, suggesting that the immune system plays an active role in shaping this cancer's growth and development. Despite these findings, our understanding of how this infiltrate affects patient prognosis and its association with lung adenocarcinoma-specific clinical factors remains limited. To address these questions, we inferred the infiltration level of six distinct immune cell types from a series of four lung adenocarcinoma gene expression datasets. We found that naive B cell, CD8+ T cell, and myeloid cell-derived expression signals of immune infiltration were significantly predictive of patient survival in multiple independent datasets, with B cell and CD8+ T cell infiltration associated with prolonged prognosis and myeloid cell infiltration associated with shorter survival. These associations remained significant even after accounting for additional clinical variables. Patients stratified by smoking status exhibited decreased CD8+ T cell infiltration and altered prognostic associations, suggesting potential immunosuppressive mechanisms in smokers. Survival analyses accounting for immune checkpoint gene expression and cellular immune infiltrate indicated checkpoint protein-specific modulatory effects on CD8+ T cell and B cell function that may be associated with patient sensitivity to immunotherapy. Together, these analyses identified reproducible associations that can be used to better characterize the role of immune infiltration in lung adenocarcinoma and demonstrate the utility in using computational approaches to systematically characterize tissue-specific tumor-immune interactions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2018.1431084genomicsimmunotherapyimmunologylung adenocarcinomasurvival
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frederick S. Varn
Laura J. Tafe
Christopher I. Amos
Chao Cheng
spellingShingle Frederick S. Varn
Laura J. Tafe
Christopher I. Amos
Chao Cheng
Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
OncoImmunology
genomics
immunotherapy
immunology
lung adenocarcinoma
survival
author_facet Frederick S. Varn
Laura J. Tafe
Christopher I. Amos
Chao Cheng
author_sort Frederick S. Varn
title Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
title_short Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
title_full Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
title_fullStr Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
title_sort computational immune profiling in lung adenocarcinoma reveals reproducible prognostic associations with implications for immunotherapy
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series OncoImmunology
issn 2162-402X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Non-small cell lung cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in the world. Lung adenocarcinoma, the most common type of non-small cell lung cancer, has been well characterized as having a dense lymphocytic infiltrate, suggesting that the immune system plays an active role in shaping this cancer's growth and development. Despite these findings, our understanding of how this infiltrate affects patient prognosis and its association with lung adenocarcinoma-specific clinical factors remains limited. To address these questions, we inferred the infiltration level of six distinct immune cell types from a series of four lung adenocarcinoma gene expression datasets. We found that naive B cell, CD8+ T cell, and myeloid cell-derived expression signals of immune infiltration were significantly predictive of patient survival in multiple independent datasets, with B cell and CD8+ T cell infiltration associated with prolonged prognosis and myeloid cell infiltration associated with shorter survival. These associations remained significant even after accounting for additional clinical variables. Patients stratified by smoking status exhibited decreased CD8+ T cell infiltration and altered prognostic associations, suggesting potential immunosuppressive mechanisms in smokers. Survival analyses accounting for immune checkpoint gene expression and cellular immune infiltrate indicated checkpoint protein-specific modulatory effects on CD8+ T cell and B cell function that may be associated with patient sensitivity to immunotherapy. Together, these analyses identified reproducible associations that can be used to better characterize the role of immune infiltration in lung adenocarcinoma and demonstrate the utility in using computational approaches to systematically characterize tissue-specific tumor-immune interactions.
topic genomics
immunotherapy
immunology
lung adenocarcinoma
survival
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2018.1431084
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