Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5R01CA216265-05 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Christensen, Brock |
Organization: |
Dartmouth College |
Project Title: |
(PQ3) Immune Epigenetic Biomarkers of Bladder Cancer Outcomes |
Fiscal Year: |
2021 |
Abstract
ABSTRACT
There are an estimated 765,000 people with a diagnosis of bladder cancer living in the United States and risk
of disease recurrence and progression can be high. Frequent, invasive transurethral screening procedures to
monitor for recurrence and progression burden both patients and the health care system. A better
understanding of the tumor-associated immune responses in bladder cancer patients could provide for more
informed clinical decisions on the necessary frequency of invasive follow up procedures and reduce patient
morbidity. We propose to leverage an existing population-based study of bladder cancer that includes a range
of patient age groups, has several years of follow up, includes patient treatment and outcome data, as well as
matched tumor samples. Our collaborative group has developed and extensively validated epigenetic
biomarkers of leukocyte subtypes allowing the use of archival DNA to study immune profiles. Here we will use
our proven framework to expand our repertoire of leukocyte epigenetic biomarkers to include myeloid derived
suppressor cells (MDSC), and test and validate the relation of MDSC and other leukocyte subtypes (including
the neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio: NLR), and cell type activation states with bladder cancer outcomes;
recurrence, progression, and survival. We will use time-to-event analysis and aim to understand the
independent contributions of immune profiles, age at diagnosis, tumor stage and grade, smoking history, and
treatment (including BCG immunotherapy), with bladder cancer outcomes. In addition, we propose to measure
somatic alteration profiles of bladder tumors from matched subjects and assess the relation of blood immune
signatures with tumor methylation and survival to understand the crosstalk between tumor profiles and patient
immune responses. Finally, in an exploratory aim we will prospectively investigate both pre-treatment and post-
treatment immune signatures in bladder cancer patients. At this opportune time of emerging
immunomodulatory therapeutics our existing population-based study resource provides a cost-efficient setting
to advance towards improved risk projection in newly diagnosed patients by ushering in a novel and flexible
immune monitoring toolkit that can inform clinical decision-making using data on tumor-associated immune
responses.
Publications
None