4.6 Article

Characteristics of Pan-Cancer Patients With Ultrahigh Tumor Mutation Burden

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.682017

Keywords

pan-cancer; hypermutation; tumor mutation burden; mismatch repair; polymerase

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [81972707]
  2. Shanghai Rising-Star Program [20QA1406200]
  3. Shanghai Municipal Commission of Health and Family Planning [20184Y0048]
  4. Shanghai Anticancer Association EYAS PROJECT [SACA-CY19C19]
  5. Guangci Distinguished Young Scholars Training Program [GCQN-2018-A06]

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This study characterized hypermutated tumors and demonstrated that DNA damage repair plays a critical role in hypermutation based on the analysis of 5,980 tumor samples. High mutation rates were detected in DNA mismatch repair genes and polymerase genes in the hypermutated group, along with overlap between high TMB, high microsatellite instability, and high PD-L1. Mutant genes like EGFR, KRAS, and PIK3CA were found to be enriched in oncogenic signaling and DNA damage repair pathways. The study also highlighted significant differences in somatic cell characteristics and distribution between hypermutated and non-hypermutated groups.
Background Tumor mutation burden has been proven to be a good predictor for the efficacy of immunotherapy, especially in patients with hypermutation. However, most research focused on the analysis of hypermutation in individual tumors, and there is a lack of integrated research on the hypermutation across different cancers. This study aimed to characterize hypermutated patients to distinguish between these patients and non-hypermutated patients. Methods A total of 5,980 tumor samples involving 23 types of solid tumors from the in-house database were included in the study. Based on the cutoff value of tumor mutation burden (TMB), all samples were divided into hypermutated or non-hypermutated groups. Microsatellite instability status, PD-L1 expression and other mutation-related indicators were analyzed. Results Among the 5,980 tumor samples, 1,164 were selected as samples with hypermutation. Compared with the non-hypermutated group, a significant increase in the mutation rates of DNA mismatch repair genes and polymerase genes was detected in the hypermutated group, and there was an overlap between high TMB and high microsatellite instability or high PD-L1. In addition, we found that EGFR, KRAS and PIK3CA had a high frequency of both single nucleotide variation and copy number variation mutations. These identified mutant genes were enriched in the oncogenic signaling pathway and the DNA damage repair pathway. At the same time, the somatic cell characteristics and distribution of the two groups were significantly different. Conclusions This study identified genetic and phenotypic characteristics of hypermutated tumors and demonstrated that DNA damage repair is critically involved in hypermutation.

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