Harmonization of Tumor Mutational Burden Quantification and Association With Response to Immune Checkpoint Blockade in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Purpose: Heterogeneity in tumor mutational burden (TMB) quantification across sequencing platforms limits the application and further study of this potential biomarker of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). We hypothesized that harmonization of TMB across platforms would enable integration of distinct clinical datasets to better characterize the association between TMB and ICI response. Methods: Cohorts of NSCLC patients sequenced by one of three targeted panels or by whole exome sequencing (WES) were compared (total n=7297). TMB was calculated uniformly and compared across cohorts. TMB distributions were harmonized by applying a normal transformation followed by standardization to z-scores. In sub-cohorts of patients treated with ICIs (DFCI n=272; MSKCC n=227), the association between TMB and outcome was assessed. Durable clinical benefit (DCB) was defined as responsive/stable disease lasting ≥6 months. Results: TMB values were higher in the panel cohorts than the WES cohort. Average mutation rates per gene were highly concordant across cohorts (Pearson coefficient 0.842-0.866). Subsetting the WES cohort by gene panels only partially reproduced the observed differences in TMB. Standardization of TMB into z-scores harmonized TMB distributions and enabled integration of the ICI-treated sub-cohorts. Simulations indicated that cohorts >900 are necessary for this approach. TMB did not associate with response in never smokers or patients harboring targetable driver alterations, although these analyses were under-powered. Increasing TMB thresholds increased DCB rate, but DCB rates within deciles varied. Receiver operator curves yielded an area under the curve of 0.614 with no natural inflection point. Conclusion: Z-score conversion harmonizes TMB values and enables integration of datasets derived from different sequencing panels. Clinical and biologic features may provide context to the clinical application of TMB, and warrant further study.

publication date

  • November 12, 2019

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6907021

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85086413399

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1200/PO.19.00171

PubMed ID

  • 31832578

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 3