Epstein-Barr virus and mismatch repair deficiency status differ between oesophageal and gastric cancer: A large multi-centre study.
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Date
2018-05ICR Author
Author
Hewitt, LC
Inam, IZ
Saito, Y
Yoshikawa, T
Quaas, A
Hoelscher, A
Bollschweiler, E
Fazzi, GE
Melotte, V
Langley, RE
Nankivell, M
Cunningham, D
Allum, W
Hutchins, GG
Grabsch, HI
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background Oesophageal (OeC) and gastric (GC) cancer patients are treated with similar multimodal therapy and have poor survival. There remains an urgent clinical need to identify biomarkers to individualise patient management and improve outcomes. Therapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors has shown promising results in other cancers. Proposed biomarkers to predict potential response to immune checkpoint inhibitors include DNA mismatch repair (MMR) and/or Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) status. The aim of this study was to establish and compare EBV status and MMR status in large multi-centre series of OeC and GC.Methods EBV was assessed by EBV-encoded RNA (EBER) in situ hybridisation and MMR protein expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in 988 OeC and 1213 GC from multiple centres. In a subset of OeC, microsatellite instability (MSI) was tested in parallel with MMR IHC.Results Frequency of MMR deficiency (MMRdef) and MSI was low in OeC (0.8% and 0.6%, respectively) compared with GC (10.3%). None of the OeCs were EBER positive in contrast to 4.8% EBER positive GC. EBV positive GC patients were younger (p = 0.01), more often male (p = 0.001) and had a better overall survival (p = 0.012). MMRdef GC patients were older (p = 0.001) and showed more often intestinal-type histology (p = 0.022).Conclusions This is the largest study to date indicating that EBV and MMRdef do not play a role in OeC carcinogenesis in contrast to GC. The potential clinical usefulness of determining MMRdef/EBV status to screen patients for eligibility for immune-targeting therapy differs between OeC and GC patients.
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Subject
Humans
Epstein-Barr Virus Infections
Esophageal Neoplasms
Stomach Neoplasms
Adult
Aged
Middle Aged
Female
Male
Microsatellite Instability
DNA Mismatch Repair
Biomarkers, Tumor
Research team
Medicine (RMH Smith Cunningham)
Language
eng
Date accepted
2018-02-08
License start date
2018-05
Citation
European journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990), 2018, 94 pp. 104 - 114