4.3 Article

Diagnostic and prognostic implications of a three-antibody molecular subtyping algorithm for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY CLINICAL RESEARCH
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 143-154

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cjp2.245

Keywords

bladder cancer; immunohistochemistry; GATA3; KRT5; p16

Categories

Funding

  1. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research - Government of Ontario
  2. Cancer Research Society
  3. Bladder Cancer Canada through the Operating Grant Funding Program
  4. Queen's University through the R.J. Wilson Fellowship
  5. Queen's University through the R. Samuel McLaughlin Fellowship

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Research using a three-antibody immunohistochemistry algorithm identified diagnostic and prognostic associations of basal and luminal subtypes in early-stage bladder cancer. Basal tumors were found to have higher grade and risk of progression to muscle invasion, while URO subtype showed faster recurrence compared to GU subtype, with URO-KRT5(+) tumors typically low grade and recurring slowly.
Intrinsic molecular subtypes may explain marked variation between bladder cancer patients in prognosis and response to therapy. Complex testing algorithms and little attention to more prevalent, early-stage (non-muscle invasive) bladder cancers (NMIBCs) have hindered implementation of subtyping in clinical practice. Here, using a three-antibody immunohistochemistry (IHC) algorithm, we identify the diagnostic and prognostic associations of well-validated proteomic features of basal and luminal subtypes in NMIBC. By IHC, we divided 481 NMIBCs into basal (GATA3(-)/KRT5(+)) and luminal (GATA3(+)/KRT5 variable) subtypes. We further divided the luminal subtype into URO (p16 low), URO-KRT5(+) (KRT5(+)), and genomically unstable (GU) (p16 high) subtypes. Expression thresholds were confirmed using unsupervised hierarchical clustering. Subtypes were correlated with pathology and outcomes. All NMIBC cases clustered into the basal/squamous (basal) or one of the three luminal (URO, URO-KRT5(+), and GU) subtypes. Although uncommon in this NMIBC cohort, basal tumors (3%, n = 16) had dramatically higher grade (100%, n = 16, odds ratio [OR] = 13, relative risk = 3.25) and stage, and rapid progression to muscle invasion (median progression-free survival = 35.4 months, p = 0.0001). URO, the most common subtype (46%, n = 220), showed rapid recurrence (median recurrence-free survival [RFS] = 11.5 months, p = 0.039) compared to its GU counterpart (29%, n = 137, median RFS = 16.9 months), even in patients who received intravesical immunotherapy (p = 0.049). URO-KRT5(+) tumors (22%, n = 108) were typically low grade (66%, n = 71, OR = 3.7) and recurred slowly (median RFS = 38.7 months). Therefore, a simple immunohistochemical algorithm can identify clinically relevant molecular subtypes of NMIBC. In routine clinical practice, this three-antibody algorithm may help clarify diagnostic dilemmas and optimize surveillance and treatment strategies for patients.

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