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Very low mutation burden is a feature of inflamed recurrent glioblastomas responsive to cancer immunotherapy

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Version 1 2021-01-18, 08:20
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-15, 23:32 authored by M Gromeier, MC Brown, G Zhang, X Lin, Y Chen, Z Wei, N Beaubier, H Yan, Y He, A Desjardins, JE Herndon, FS Varn, RG Verhaak, J Zhao, DP Bolognesi, AH Friedman, HS Friedman, F McSherry, AM Muscat, ES Lipp, SK Nair, M Khasraw, KB Peters, D Randazzo, JH Sampson, RE McLendon, DD Bigner, DM Ashley
Several immunotherapy clinical trials in recurrent glioblastoma have reported long-term survival benefits in 10–20% of patients. Here we perform genomic analysis of tumor tissue from recurrent WHO grade IV glioblastoma patients acquired prior to immunotherapy intervention. We report that very low tumor mutation burden is associated with longer survival after recombinant polio virotherapy or after immune checkpoint blockade in recurrent glioblastoma patients. A relationship between tumor mutation burden and survival is not observed in cohorts of immunotherapy naïve newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma patients. Transcriptomic analyses reveal an inverse relationship between tumor mutation burden and enrichment of inflammatory gene signatures in cohorts of recurrent, but not newly diagnosed glioblastoma tumors, implying that a relationship between tumor mutation burden and tumor-intrinsic inflammation evolves upon recurrence.

History

Journal

Nature Communications

Volume

12

Pagination

1-7

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

eISSN

2041-1723

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2021, The Author(s)

Issue

1

Publisher

Nature Research

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