Genomic events stratifying prognosis of early gastric cancer

Author:

Molinari Chiara,Solaini LeonardoORCID,Rebuzzi Francesca,Tedaldi Gianluca,Angeli Davide,Petracci Elisabetta,Prascevic Dusan,Ewald Jan,Rahm Erhard,Canale Matteo,Giovanni Martinelli,Tomezzoli Anna,Bencivenga Maria,Ambrosio Maria Raffaella,Marrelli Daniele,Morgagni Paolo,Ercolani Giorgio,Ulivi Paola,Saragoni Luca

Abstract

Abstract Background The purpose of the study was to conduct a comprehensive genomic characterization of gene alterations, microsatellite instability (MSI), and tumor mutational burden (TMB) in submucosal-penetrating (Pen) early gastric cancers (EGCs) with varying prognoses. Methods Samples from EGC patients undergoing surgery and with 10-year follow-up data available were collected. Tissue genomic alterations were characterized using Trusight Oncology panel (TSO500). Pathway instability (PI) scores for a selection of 218 GC-related pathways were calculated both for the present case series and EGCs from the TCGA cohort. Results Higher age and tumor location in the upper-middle tract are significantly associated with an increased hazard of relapse or death from any cause (p = 0.006 and p = 0.032). Even if not reaching a statistical significance, Pen A tumors more frequently present higher TMB values, higher frequency of MSI-subtypes and an overall increase in PI scores, along with an enrichment in immune pathways. ARID1A gene was observed to be significantly more frequently mutated in Pen A tumors (p = 0.006), as well as in patients with high TMB (p = 0.027). Tumors harboring LRP1B alterations seem to have a higher hazard of relapse or death from any cause (p = 0.089), being mutated mainly in relapsed patients (p = 0.093). Conclusions We found that the most aggressive subtype Pen A is characterized by a higher frequency of ARID1A mutations and a higher genetic instability, while LRP1B alterations seem to be related to a lower disease-free survival. Further investigations are needed to provide a rationale for the use of these markers to stratify prognosis in EGC patients.

Funder

GRAMMY Foundation

Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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