Transcriptomic and histopathological analysis of cholangiolocellular differentiation trait in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma

Author:

Rhee Hyungjin123,Ko Jung Eun123,Chung Taek12,Jee Byul A45,Kwon So Mee45,Nahm Ji Hae12,Seok Jae Yeon16,Yoo Jeong Eun12,Choi Jin‐Sub7,Thorgeirsson Snorri S.8,Andersen Jesper B.9,Lee Hye Sun10,Woo Hyun Goo45,Park Young Nyun12311

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

2. Integrated Genomic Research Center for Metabolic Regulation Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

3. BK21 PLUS Project for Medical Science Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

4. Department of Physiology Ajou University School of Medicine Suwon Korea

5. Department of Biomedical Science Graduate School Ajou University Suwon Korea

6. Department of Pathology Gachon University College of Medicine Incheon Korea

7. Department of Surgery Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

8. Laboratory of Human Carcinogenesis Center for Cancer Research National Cancer Institute National Institutes of Health Bethesda MD USA

9. Biotech Research and Innovation Centre University of Copenhagen Copenhagen N Denmark

10. Biostatistics Collaboration Unit Department of Research Affairs Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

11. Severance Biomedical Science Institute Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

Abstract

AbstractBackground & AimsIntrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) is a heterogeneous entity with diverse aetiologies, morphologies and clinical outcomes. Recently, histopathological distinction of cholangiolocellular differentiation (CD) of iCCA has been suggested. However, its genome‐wide molecular features and clinical significance remain unclear.MethodsBased on CD status, we stratified iCCAs into iCCA with CD (n=20) and iCCA without CD (n=102), and performed an integrative analysis using transcriptomic and clinicopathological profiles.ResultsiCCA with CD revealed less aggressive histopathological features compared to iCCA without CD, and iCCA with CD showed favourable clinical outcomes of overall survival and time to recurrence than iCCA without CD (P<.05 for all). Transcriptomic profiling revealed that iCCA with CD resembled an inflammation‐related subtype, while iCCA without CD resembled a proliferation subtype. In addition, we identified a CD signature that can predict prognostic outcomes of iCCA (CD_UP, n=486 and CD_DOWN, n=308). iCCAs were subgrouped into G1 (positivity for CRP and CDH2, 7%), G3 (positivity for S100P and TFF1, 32%) and G2 (the others, 61%). Prognostic outcomes for overall survival (P=.001) and time to recurrence (P=.017) were the most favourable in G1‐iCCAs, intermediate in G2‐iCCAs and the worst in G3‐iCCAs. Similar result was confirmed in the iCCA set from GSE26566 (n=68).ConclusionsCD signature was identified to predict the prognosis of iCCA. The combined evaluation of histology of CD and protein expression status of CRP, CDH2, TFF1 and S100P might help subtyping and predicting clinical outcomes of iCCA.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Health and Welfare

Publisher

Wiley

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