Back to Search Start Over

A dualistic model of primary anal canal adenocarcinoma with distinct cellular origins, etiologies, inflammatory microenvironments and mutational signatures: implications for personalised medicine

Authors :
Philippe Delvenne
Frédéric Lambert
Nathalie Piazzon
Séverine Valmary-Degano
Elodie Hendrick
Vincent Bours
Aurélie Poncin
Jean-Luc Prétet
Christiane Mougin
Lucine Vuitton
Karin Segers
Olivier Peulen
David Guenat
Patrick Roncarati
Franck Monnien
Benjamin Koopmansch
Diane Bruyère
Pascale Hubert
Laurence de Leval
William Penny
Michael Herfs
Alizée Lebeau
Christopher P. Crum
Charles M. Quick
Source :
British Journal of Cancer, British journal of cancer, vol. 118, no. 10, pp. 1302-1312
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018.

Abstract

Background Primary adenocarcinoma of the anal canal is a rare and aggressive gastrointestinal disease with unclear pathogenesis. Because of its rarity, no clear clinical practice guideline has been defined and a targeted therapeutic armamentarium has yet to be developed. The present article aimed at addressing this information gap by in-depth characterising the anal glandular neoplasms at the histologic, immunologic, genomic and epidemiologic levels. Methods In this multi-institutional study, we first examined the histological features displayed by each collected tumour (n = 74) and analysed their etiological relationship with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The intratumoural immune cell subsets (CD4, CD8, Foxp3), the expression of immune checkpoints (PD-1, PD-L1), the defect in mismatch repair proteins and the mutation analysis of multiple clinically relevant genes in the gastrointestinal cancer setting were also determined. Finally, the prognostic significance of each clinicopathological variable was assessed. Results Phenotypic analysis revealed two region-specific subtypes of anal canal adenocarcinoma. The significant differences in the HPV status, density of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes, expression of immune checkpoints and mutational profile of several targetable genes further supported the separation of these latter neoplasms into two distinct entities. Importantly, anal gland/transitional-type cancers, which poorly respond to standard treatments, displayed less mutations in downstream effectors of the EGFR signalling pathway (i.e., KRAS and NRAS) and demonstrated a significantly higher expression of the immune inhibitory ligand-receptor pair PD-1/PD-L1 compared to their counterparts arising from the colorectal mucosa. Conclusions Taken together, the findings reported in the present article reveal, for the first time, that glandular neoplasms of the anal canal arise by HPV-dependent or independent pathways. These etiological differences leads to both individual immune profiles and mutational landscapes that can be targeted for therapeutic benefits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15321827 and 00070920
Volume :
118
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....727b845e13b0a296918d858027e98dab