Abstract
ObjectiveCytotoxic agents are the cornerstone of treatment for patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), despite heterogeneous benefit. We hypothesised that the pretreatment molecular profiles of diagnostic biopsies can predict patient benefit from chemotherapy and define molecular bases of innate chemoresistance.DesignWe identified a cohort of advanced iCCA patients with comparable baseline characteristics who diverged as extreme outliers on chemotherapy (survival <6 m in rapid progressors, RP; survival >23 m in long survivors, LS). Diagnostic biopsies were characterised by digital pathology, then subjected to whole-transcriptome profiling of bulk and geospatially macrodissected tissue regions. Spatial transcriptomics of tumour-infiltrating myeloid cells was performed using targeted digital spatial profiling (GeoMx). Transcriptome signatures were evaluated in multiple cohorts of resected cancers. Signatures were also characterised using in vitro cell lines, in vivo mouse models and single cell RNA-sequencing data.ResultsPretreatment transcriptome profiles differentiated patients who would become RPs or LSs on chemotherapy. Biologically, this signature originated from altered tumour-myeloid dynamics, implicating tumour-induced immune tolerogenicity with poor response to chemotherapy. The central role of the liver microenviroment was confrmed by the association of the RPLS transcriptome signature with clinical outcome in iCCA but not extrahepatic CCA, and in liver metastasis from colorectal cancer, but not in the matched primary bowel tumours.ConclusionsThe RPLS signature could be a novel metric of chemotherapy outcome in iCCA. Further development and validation of this transcriptomic signature is warranted to develop precision chemotherapy strategies in these settings.
Funder
Chief Scientist Office
la Asociación Española Contra
Fondazione AIRC
the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation, EIT
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Welcome Trust
Stratified Medicine Consortium
Danish Medical Research Council
Merck
University of Glasgow
Cancer Research UK
Danish Cancer Society
Servier
MICINN
UK Medical Research Council
European Cooperation in Science and Technology
Salut de Cataluna
Cancer Research-UK
Fundación MERCK Salud
Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro
Spanish National Health
European Union– NextGenerationEU
Generalitat de Catalunya
Novo Nordisk Foundation
NIH
Scotland Cancer Centre
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8 articles.
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