Expression patterns of mismatch repair proteins in cervical cancer uncover independent prognostic value of MSH-2

Author:

van den Berg Madeleine CharlotteORCID,Berg Hege F,Stokowy Tomasz,Hoivik Erling A,Woie Kathrine,Engerud Hilde,Ojesina Akinyemi I,Haldorsen Ingfrid Salvesen,Trovik Jone,Bertelsen Bjørn I,Krakstad Camilla,Halle Mari Kyllesø

Abstract

ObjectiveAlthough early-detected cervical cancer is associated with good survival, the prognosis for late-stage disease is poor and treatment options are sparse. Mismatch repair deficiency (MMR-D) has surfaced as a predictor of prognosis and response to immune checkpoint inhibitor(s) in several cancer types, but its value in cervical cancer remains unclear. This study aimed to define the prevalence of MMR-D in cervical cancer and assess the prognostic value of MMR protein expression.MethodsExpression of the MMR proteins MLH-1, PMS-2, MSH-2, and MSH-6 was investigated by immunohistochemical staining in a prospectively collected cervical cancer cohort (n=508) with corresponding clinicopathological and follow-up data. Sections were scored as either loss or intact expression to define MMR-D, and by a staining index, based on staining intensity and area, evaluating the prognostic potential. RNA and whole exome sequencing data were available for 72 and 75 of the patients and were used for gene set enrichment and mutational analyses, respectively.ResultsFive (1%) tumors were MMR-deficient, three of which were of neuroendocrine histology. MMR status did not predict survival (HR 1.93, p=0.17). MSH-2 low (n=48) was associated with poor survival (HR 1.94, p=0.02), also when adjusting for tumor stage, tumor type, and patient age (HR 2.06, p=0.013). MSH-2 low tumors had higher tumor mutational burden (p=0.003) and higher frequency of (frameshift) mutations in the double-strand break repair geneRAD50(p<0.01).ConclusionMMR-D is rare in cervical cancer, yet low MSH-2 expression is an independent predictor of poor survival.

Funder

Helse Vest

Norges Forskningsråd

Kreftforeningen

University of Bergen

Trond Mohn stiftelse

Publisher

BMJ

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