Integrative molecular characterisation of gallbladder cancer reveals micro-environment-associated subtypes

Nepal, Chirag; Zhu, Bin; O'Rourke, Colm J.; Bhatt, Deepak Kumar; Lee, Donghyuk; Song, Lei; Wang, Difei; Van Dyke, Alison L.; Choo-Wosoba, Hyoyoung; Liu, Zhiwei; Hildesheim, Allan; Goldstein, Alisa M.; Dean, Michael; LaFuente-Barquero, Juan; Lawrence, Scott; et. al.

Abstract

Background & Aims: Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is the most common type of biliary tract cancer, but the molecular mechanisms involved in gallbladder carcinogenesis remain poorly understood. In this study, we applied integrative genomics approaches to characterise GBC and explore molecular subtypes associated with patient survival. Methods: We profiled the mutational landscape of GBC tumours (whole-exome sequencing on 92, targeted sequencing on 98, in total 190 patients). In a subset (n = 45), we interrogated the matched transcriptomes, DNA methylomes, and somatic copy number alterations. We explored molecular subtypes identified through clustering tumours by genes whose expression was associated with survival in 47 tumours and validated subtypes on 34 publicly available GBC cases. Results: Exome analysis revealed TP53was themostmutated gene. The overallmutation ratewas low(median 0.82Mut/Mb). APOBECmediated mutational signatures were more common in tumours with higher mutational burden. Aflatoxin-related signatures tended to be highly clonal (present in >-50% of cancer cells). Transcriptome-wide survival association analysis revealed a 95gene signature that stratified all GBC patients into 3 subtypes that suggested an association with overall survival post-resection. The 2 poor-survival subtypes were associated with adverse clinicopathologic features (advanced stage, pN1, pM1), immunosuppressive micro-environments (myeloid-derived suppressor cell accumulation, extensive desmoplasia, hypoxia) and T cell dysfunction, whereas the good-survival subtype showed the opposite features. Conclusion: These data suggest that the tumour microenvironment and immune profiles could play an important role in gallbladder carcinogenesis and should be evaluated in future clinical studies, along with mutational profiles. Lay summary: Gallbladder cancer is highly fatal, and its causes are poorly understood. We evaluated gallbladder tumours to see if there were differences between tumours in genetic information such as DNA and RNA. We found evidence of aflatoxin exposure in these tumours, and immune cells surrounding the tumours were associated with survival. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of European Association for the Study of the Liver.

Más información

Título según WOS: Integrative molecular characterisation of gallbladder cancer reveals micro-environment-associated subtypes
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
Volumen: 74
Número: 5
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 1132
Página final: 1144
DOI:

10.1016/J.JHEP.2020.11.033

Notas: ISI