Influence of Race on Microsatellite Instability and CD8+ T Cell Infiltration in Colon Cancer
Author(s) -
John M. Carethers,
Bhavya Murali,
Bing Yang,
Ryan T. Doctolero,
Akihiro Tajima,
Ranor Basa,
Edward J. Smith,
Monte Lee,
Ryan Janke,
Tigo,
Ruth Tejada,
Ming Ji,
Matthew A. Kinseth,
Betty L. Cabrera,
Katsumi Miyai,
Temitope O. Keku,
Christopher F. Martin,
Joseph A. Galanko,
Robert S. Sandler,
Kathleen L. McGuire
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0100461
Subject(s) - microsatellite instability , colorectal cancer , medicine , oncology , population , cohort , dna mismatch repair , cancer , cd8 , gastroenterology , pathology , biology , microsatellite , immunology , immune system , genetics , gene , allele , environmental health
African American patients with colorectal cancer show higher mortality than their Caucasian counterparts. Biology might play a partial role, and prior studies suggest a higher prevalence for microsatellite instability (MSI) among cancers from African Americans, albeit patients with MSI cancers have improved survival over patients with non-MSI cancers, counter to the outcome observed for African American patients. CD8 + T cell infiltration of colon cancer is postively correlated with MSI tumors, and is also related to improved outcome. Here, we utilized a 503-person, population-based colon cancer cohort comprising 45% African Americans to determine, under blinded conditions from all epidemiological data, the prevalence of MSI and associated CD8 + T cell infiltration within the cancers. Among Caucasian cancers, 14% were MSI, whereas African American cancers demonstrated 7% MSI ( P = 0.009). Clinically, MSI cancers between races were similar; among microsatellite stable cancers, African American patients were younger, female, and with proximal cancers. CD8 + T cells were higher in MSI cancers (88.0 vs 30.4/hpf, P <0.0001), but was not different between races. Utilizing this population-based cohort, African American cancers show half the MSI prevalence of Caucasians without change in CD8 + T cell infiltration which may contribute towards their higher mortality from colon cancer.
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