Publications
Department of Medicine faculty members published more than 3,000 peer-reviewed articles in 2022.
2019
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2019
Prediction of HLA epitopes is important for the development of cancer immunotherapies and vaccines. However, current prediction algorithms have limited predictive power, in part because they were not trained on high-quality epitope datasets covering a broad range of HLA alleles. To enable prediction of endogenous HLA class I-associated peptides across a large fraction of the human population, we used mass spectrometry to profile >185,000 peptides eluted from 95 HLA-A, -B, -C and -G mono-allelic cell lines. We identified canonical peptide motifs per HLA allele, unique and shared binding submotifs across alleles and distinct motifs associated with different peptide lengths. By integrating these data with transcript abundance and peptide processing, we developed HLAthena, providing allele-and-length-specific and pan-allele-pan-length prediction models for endogenous peptide presentation. These models predicted endogenous HLA class I-associated ligands with 1.5-fold improvement in positive predictive value compared with existing tools and correctly identified >75% of HLA-bound peptides that were observed experimentally in 11 patient-derived tumor cell lines.
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OBJECTIVES
Potentially targetable genomic alterations have been identified in lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC), but none have yet translated into effective therapy. We examined potential benefits of next generation sequencing (NGS) in a cohort of consecutive LUSC patients with emphasis on distinctions between smokers and light/never smokers and implications for clinical trial enrollment.
METHODS
We retrospectively evaluated results from an internally developed NGS assay (OncoPanel) targeting ∼300 genes with a mean overall target coverage of >200x for consecutive LUSC seen at our institution over 30 months.
RESULTS
Tissue was obtained from 172 patients for targeted NGS. 42 (24 %) samples were insufficient for testing. Median age of tested patients was 66, including 87 % moderate/heavy versus 13 % light/never smokers; 66 % were stage IIIB or IV. Of 130 patients with evaluable NGS results, 49 (38 %) had at least 1 alteration qualifying for enrollment to a LungMAP treatment arm (PIK3CA, MET, FGFR family, cell cycle, or homologous recombination pathways) or for an approved therapy or other clinical trial (e.g. EGFR sensitizing mutations, MET exon 14 splice mutations, TSC1/2 mutation, or microsatellite instability). Therapeutic targets were enriched in light/never smokers (47 % vs 35 % moderate/heavy smokers). Unexpectedly, genomic features suggested an alternative diagnosis (metastatic cutaneous squamous carcinoma; mesothelioma) in 7 patients, including 35 % of never/light smokers.
CONCLUSION
NGS in a real-world LUSC cohort yields potentially targetable genomic alterations informing clinical trial enrollment and approved therapies and critical diagnostic insights. Our findings strongly support current guidelines recommending mutational profiling of LUSC arising in light/never smoking patients; the utility of sequencing in smokers with LUSC appears to be limited to identification of research targets.
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