Interactions of Age and Blood Immune Factors and Noninvasive Prediction of Glioma Survival

Author:

Molinaro Annette M12ORCID,Wiencke John K1,Warrier Gayathri1ORCID,Koestler Devin C3,Chunduru Pranathi1,Lee Ji Yoon1,Hansen Helen M1,Lee Sean1ORCID,Anguiano Joaquin1,Rice Terri1,Bracci Paige M2ORCID,McCoy Lucie1ORCID,Salas Lucas A4ORCID,Christensen Brock C45ORCID,Wrensch Margaret1,Kelsey Karl T6ORCID,Taylor Jennie W17ORCID,Clarke Jennifer L17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

2. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

3. Department of Biostatistics & Data Science, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA

4. Department of Epidemiology, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Lebanon, NH, USA

5. Departments of Molecular and Systems Biology and Community and Family Medicine, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Lebanon, NH, USA

6. Departments of Epidemiology and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA

7. Department of Neurology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Tumor-based classification of human glioma portends patient prognosis, but considerable unexplained survival variability remains. Host factors (eg, age) also strongly influence survival times, partly reflecting a compromised immune system. How blood epigenetic measures of immune characteristics and age augment molecular classifications in glioma survival has not been investigated. We assess the prognostic impact of immune cell fractions and epigenetic age in archived blood across glioma molecular subtypes for the first time. Methods We evaluated immune cell fractions and epigenetic age in archived blood from the University of California San Francisco Adult Glioma Study, which included a training set of 197 patients with IDH-wild type, 1p19q intact, TERT wild type (IDH/1p19q/TERT-WT) glioma, an evaluation set of 350 patients with other subtypes of glioma, and 454 patients without glioma. Results IDH/1p19q/TERT-WT patients had lower lymphocyte fractions (CD4+ T, CD8+ T, natural killer, and B cells) and higher neutrophil fractions than people without glioma. Recursive partitioning analysis delineated 4 statistically significantly different survival groups for patients with IDH/1p19q/TERT-WT based on an interaction between chronological age and 2 blood immune factors, CD4+ T cells, and neutrophils. Median overall survival ranged from 0.76 years (95% confidence interval = 0.55-0.99) for the worst survival group (n = 28) to 9.72 years (95% confidence interval = 6.18 to not available) for the best (n = 33). The recursive partitioning analysis also statistically significantly delineated 4 risk groups in patients with other glioma subtypes. Conclusions The delineation of different survival groups in the training and evaluation sets based on an interaction between chronological age and blood immune characteristics suggests that common host immune factors among different glioma types may affect survival. The ability of DNA methylation-based markers of immune status to capture diverse, clinically relevant information may facilitate noninvasive, personalized patient evaluation in the neuro-oncology clinic.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

loglio Collective, and the National Brain Tumor Foundation

John Berardi, Helen Glaser, Elvera Olsen, Raymond E. Cooper, and William Martinusen

Robert Magnin Newman Endowed Chair in Neuro-oncology and MW

Stanley D. Lewis and Virginia S. Lewis Endowment

NIH

NIGMS

2018 AACR-Johnson & Johnson Lung Cancer Innovation Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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