» Articles » PMID: 39103508

Detecting HLA Loss of Heterozygosity Within a Standard Diagnostic Sequencing Workflow for Prognostic and Therapeutic Opportunities

Abstract

To enable interrogation of tumor HLA LOH as a clinical diagnostic for precision oncology, we developed and validated an assay that detects HLA LOH within the context of an FDA-approved clinical diagnostic test, Tempus xT CDx. Validation was conducted via: (1) analytical evaluation of 17 archival patient samples and 42 cell line admixtures and (2) independent clinical evaluation of LOH prevalence in the HLA-A gene (HLA-A LOH) across 10,982 patients. To evaluate the prognostic relevance of HLA-A LOH we assessed 256 immunotherapy-treated non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. To determine the feasibility of prospectively identifying and enrolling HLA-A LOH patients into a clinical trial, we established BASECAMP-1 (NCT04981119). We observed a positive predictive agreement of 97% and a negative predictive agreement of 100% in samples with ≥ 40% tumor purity. We observed HLA-A LOH in 16.1% of patients (1771/10,982), comparable to previous reports. HLA-A LOH was associated with longer survival among NSCLC adenocarcinoma patients (HR = 0.60, 95% CI [0.37, 0.96], p = 0.032) with a trend towards shorter survival among squamous cell patients (HR = 1.64, 95% CI [0.80, 3.41], p = 0.183). In 20 months, we prospectively screened 1720 subjects using the Tempus AWARE program, identifying 26 HLA-A*02 LOH patients at 8 sites, with 14 (54%) enrolled into BASECAMP-1. In conclusion, we developed and validated an investigational assay that detects tumor HLA LOH within an FDA-approved clinical diagnostic test, enabling HLA LOH utilization in diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic applications.

Citing Articles

Analysis of biopsies of gastric cancer, intestinal and diffuse, and non-atrophic gastritis: an overview of loss of heterozygosity in Mexican patients.

Larios-Serrato V, Valdez-Salazar H, Torres J, Camorlinga M, Pina-Sanchez P, Minauro F PeerJ. 2025; 13:e18928.

PMID: 40028213 PMC: 11869887. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.18928.


Logic-gated and contextual control of immunotherapy for solid tumors: contrasting multi-specific T cell engagers and CAR-T cell therapies.

Nolan-Stevaux O, Smith R Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1490911.

PMID: 39606234 PMC: 11599190. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1490911.

References
1.
Garrido F, Cabrera T, Aptsiauri N . "Hard" and "soft" lesions underlying the HLA class I alterations in cancer cells: implications for immunotherapy. Int J Cancer. 2010; 127(2):249-56. DOI: 10.1002/ijc.25270. View

2.
Sade-Feldman M, Jiao Y, Chen J, Rooney M, Barzily-Rokni M, Eliane J . Resistance to checkpoint blockade therapy through inactivation of antigen presentation. Nat Commun. 2017; 8(1):1136. PMC: 5656607. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-01062-w. View

3.
Martinez-Jimenez F, Priestley P, Shale C, Baber J, Rozemuller E, Cuppen E . Genetic immune escape landscape in primary and metastatic cancer. Nat Genet. 2023; 55(5):820-831. PMC: 10181939. DOI: 10.1038/s41588-023-01367-1. View

4.
Marincola F, Shamamian P, Alexander R, Gnarra J, Turetskaya R, Nedospasov S . Loss of HLA haplotype and B locus down-regulation in melanoma cell lines. J Immunol. 1994; 153(3):1225-37. View

5.
Robinson J, Waller M, Parham P, de Groot N, Bontrop R, Kennedy L . IMGT/HLA and IMGT/MHC: sequence databases for the study of the major histocompatibility complex. Nucleic Acids Res. 2003; 31(1):311-4. PMC: 165517. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkg070. View