Purpose: TP53 signature has a robust predictive performance for prognosis in early-stage breast cancer, but the experiment that reported this relied on public microarray data and fresh-frozen samples. Before TP53 signature can be used in a clinical setting, a simple and low-cost diagnostic system using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples is needed. New treatments based on the biological characteristics of TP53 signature are expected to follow.
Experimental design: TP53 signature was evaluated in 174 FFPE early breast cancer specimens using digital quantification via the nCounter technique (NanoString). Patients were classified as TP53 signature mutant type (n = 64) or wild type (n = 110). Predictive power of TP53 signature was compared with those of other gene expression signatures in 153 fresh-frozen samples of the same cohort by RNA-seq. The molecular features of TP53 signature were elucidated using TCGA omics data and RNA-seq data to explore new therapeutic strategies for patients with TP53 signature mutant type.
Results: TP53 signature was a strong predictor of prognosis and was also more accurate than other gene expression signatures and independent of other clinicopathological factors. TCGA data analysis showed that risk score of TP53 signature was an index of chromosomal and genomic instability and that TP53 signature mutant type was associated with higher PD-L1 expression, variation in copy numbers, and numbers of somatic mutations.
Conclusions: TP53 signature as diagnosed using the nCounter system is not only a robust predictor of prognosis but also a potential predictor of responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Keywords: TP53; breast cancer; genomic instability; prognostic biomarker; transcriptome.