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Overcoming intratumoural heterogeneity for reproducible molecular risk stratification: a case study in advanced kidney cancer.


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Authors

Lubbock, ALR 
Stewart, GD 
O'Mahony, FC 
Laird, A 
Mullen, P 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Metastatic clear cell renal cell cancer (mccRCC) portends a poor prognosis and urgently requires better clinical tools for prognostication as well as for prediction of response to treatment. Considerable investment in molecular risk stratification has sought to overcome the performance ceiling encountered by methods restricted to traditional clinical parameters. However, replication of results has proven challenging, and intratumoural heterogeneity (ITH) may confound attempts at tissue-based stratification. METHODS: We investigated the influence of confounding ITH on the performance of a novel molecular prognostic model, enabled by pathologist-guided multiregion sampling (n = 183) of geographically separated mccRCC cohorts from the SuMR trial (development, n = 22) and the SCOTRRCC study (validation, n = 22). Tumour protein levels quantified by reverse phase protein array (RPPA) were investigated alongside clinical variables. Regularised wrapper selection identified features for Cox multivariate analysis with overall survival as the primary endpoint. RESULTS: The optimal subset of variables in the final stratification model consisted of N-cadherin, EPCAM, Age, mTOR (NEAT). Risk groups from NEAT had a markedly different prognosis in the validation cohort (log-rank p = 7.62 × 10(-7); hazard ratio (HR) 37.9, 95% confidence interval 4.1-353.8) and 2-year survival rates (accuracy = 82%, Matthews correlation coefficient = 0.62). Comparisons with established clinico-pathological scores suggest favourable performance for NEAT (Net reclassification improvement 7.1% vs International Metastatic Database Consortium score, 25.4% vs Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center score). Limitations include the relatively small cohorts and associated wide confidence intervals on predictive performance. Our multiregion sampling approach enabled investigation of NEAT validation when limiting the number of samples analysed per tumour, which significantly degraded performance. Indeed, sample selection could change risk group assignment for 64% of patients, and prognostication with one sample per patient performed only slightly better than random expectation (median logHR = 0.109). Low grade tissue was associated with 3.5-fold greater variation in predicted risk than high grade (p = 0.044). CONCLUSIONS: This case study in mccRCC quantitatively demonstrates the critical importance of tumour sampling for the success of molecular biomarker studies research where ITH is a factor. The NEAT model shows promise for mccRCC prognostication and warrants follow-up in larger cohorts. Our work evidences actionable parameters to guide sample collection (tumour coverage, size, grade) to inform the development of reproducible molecular risk stratification methods.

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Keywords

cancer, tumour heterogeneity, prognostic markers, renal cell carcinoma, tumour biomarkers

Journal Title

BMC Medicine

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1741-7015
1741-7015

Volume Title

Publisher

BioMed Central
Sponsorship
We acknowledge financial support from the Royal Society of Edinburgh Scottish Government Fellowship co-funded by Marie Curie Actions (IMO), Carnegie Trust (50115; IMO, DJH, GDS), IGMM DTF (IMO, GDS), Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12018/25; IMO), Chief Scientist Office Scotland (ETM37; GDS, DJH), Cancer Research UK (Experimental Medicine Centre; TP, DJH), Renal Cancer Research Fund (GDS), Kidney Cancer Scotland (GDS), MRC Clinical Training Fellowship (AL), RCSEd Robertson Trust (AL) and Melville Trust (AL).