Evaluation of the associations of interlukin‐7 genetic variants with toxicity and efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors: A replication study of a Japanese population, based on the findings of a European genome‐wide association study

Author:

Miyamoto Hideaki1,Kondo Yasuteru123ORCID,Itobayashi Ei4,Uehara Masayoshi5,Hiraoka Atsushi6,Kudo Masatoshi7ORCID,Kakizaki Satoru8ORCID,Kagawa Tatehiro9ORCID,Miuma Satoshi10ORCID,Suzuki Takanori11,Sugi Kazuhiro12,Suyama Koichi13,Beppu Toru14ORCID,Toyoda Hidenori15ORCID,Yoshiji Hitoshi16,Uojima Haruki17,Miyase Shiho18,Inoue Kaori19,Tamori Akihiro20,Ito Takanori21ORCID,Shimose Shigeo22ORCID,Suda Goki23ORCID,Hayashi Tsuguru3,Onishi Masaya2425,Narahara Satoshi1,Watanabe Takehisa1,Iwatsuki Masaaki26,Fukushima Satoshi27,Tanaka Yasuhito1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Kumamoto University Hospital Kumamoto Japan

2. Department of Hepatology Sendai Tokushukai Hospital Miyagi Japan

3. Department of Hepatology Sendai Kousei Hospital Miyagi Japan

4. Department of Gastroenterology Asahi General Hospital Chiba Japan

5. Department of Gastroenterology Saiseikai Kumamoto Hospital Kumamoto Japan

6. Department of Gastroenterology Ehime Prefectural Central Hospital Ehime Japan

7. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Kindai University Hospital Osaka Japan

8. Department of Clinical Research NHO Takasaki General Medical Center Gunma Japan

9. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Department of Internal Medicine Tokai University School of Medicine Kanagawa Japan

10. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Nagasaki University Hospital Nagasaki Japan

11. Department of Gastroenterology and Metabolism Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Science Aichi Japan

12. Department of Gastroenterology National Hospital Organization Kumamoto Medical Center Kumamoto Japan

13. Department of Medical Oncology Toranomon Hospital Tokyo Japan

14. Department of Surgery Yamaga City Medical Center Kumamoto Japan

15. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Ogaki Municipal Hospital Gifu Japan

16. Department of Gastroenterology Nara Medical University Nara Japan

17. Department of Gastroenterology Kitasato University Hospital Kanagawa Japan

18. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Kumamoto Shinto General Hospital Kumamoto Japan

19. Department of Liver and Diabetes and Endocrinology Saga University Hospital Saga Japan

20. Department of Hepatology Osaka Metropolitan University Hospital Osaka Japan

21. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Nagoya University Hospital Aichi Japan

22. Department of Gastroenterology Kurume University Hospital Fukuoka Japan

23. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Hokkaido University Hospital Hokkaido Japan

24. Department of Computational Biology and Medical Sciences Graduate School of Frontier Sciences The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

25. Department of Gastroenterology Graduate School of Medicine Gifu University Gifu Japan

26. Department of Gastroenterological Surgery Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kumamoto University Kumamoto Japan

27. Faculty of Life Sciences Department of Dermatology and Plastic Surgery Kumamoto University Kumamoto Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimRecent genome‐wide association studies of European populations have identified rs16906115, a single‐nucleotide polymorphism in the interleukin‐7 gene, as a predictor of immune‐related adverse events (irAEs) and the therapeutic efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors. We evaluated this single‐nucleotide polymorphism in a Japanese population.MethodsFrom January 2021, we stored host DNA from individuals who received various types of immune checkpoint inhibitors. From this population, we categorized 510 participants into cases (grade ≥2 irAEs) and controls (received ≥3 immune checkpoint inhibitor doses, follow‐up ≥12 weeks, no irAEs), and divided 339 hepatocellular carcinoma patients treated with atezolizumab/bevacizumab into responders and non‐responders, evaluated using the modified response evaluation criteria in solid tumors. We compared the minor allele frequencies of rs16906115 between cases and controls, and responders and non‐responders.ResultsIn the irAE prediction analysis of 234 cases and 276 controls, the minor allele frequency was 0.244 in the case group and 0.265 in the control group. This difference is not significant. In the analysis predicting the therapeutic efficacy for hepatocellular carcinoma patients, the responders had a significantly lower minor allele frequency of 0.220, compared with 0.300 for the non‐responders (p = 0.022). Univariate and multivariate analyses identified the minor allele homozygosity as a significant predictor of treatment response, with odds ratios of 0.292 (p = 0.015) in the univariate analysis and 0.315 (p = 0.023) in the multivariate analysis.ConclusionsIn our Japanese cohort, no association was found between the rs16906115 minor allele and irAEs or treatment efficacy. The minor allele homozygosity may be associated with a negative therapeutic outcome.Clinical trial registrationUMIN Clinical Trials Registry with the number UMIN000043798.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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