Genomic landscape of late-stage gastric cancer: Analysis from KEYNOTE-059, KEYNOTE-061, and KEYNOTE-062 studies Journal Article


Authors: Janjigian, Y. Y.; Cecchini, M.; Shitara, K.; Enzinger, P. C.; Wainberg, Z. A.; Chau, I.; Satoh, T.; Lee, J.; Nebozhyn, M.; Loboda, A.; Kobie, J.; Vajdi, A.; Shih, C. S.; Cristescu, R.; Alexander Cao, Z.
Article Title: Genomic landscape of late-stage gastric cancer: Analysis from KEYNOTE-059, KEYNOTE-061, and KEYNOTE-062 studies
Abstract: PURPOSEThe Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) classifies gastric cancer (GC) into four molecular subtypes: Epstein-Barr virus-positive, microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H), genomically stable (GS), and chromosomal instability (CIN). This exploratory analysis compared the genomic landscape of late-stage GC from KEYNOTE-059, KEYNOTE-061, and KEYNOTE-062 studies with early-stage GC from TCGA and evaluated the genomic characteristics of late-stage GC in patients of Western and Asian origin.MATERIALS AND METHODSUsing pretreatment tumor samples, bulk DNA was analyzed via whole-exome sequencing (WES; KEYNOTE-059/KEYNOTE-061) and FoundationOneCDx (KEYNOTE-062) to determine TCGA-defined molecular subtypes (only MSI-H is determinable from FoundationOneCDx), genomic alterations, homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), and tumor mutational burden (TMB); gene expression signatures were analyzed using RNA sequencing.RESULTSWhen comparing KEYNOTE-059/061/062 combined WES and FoundationOneCDx data with data from TCGA, the MSI-H subtype prevalence was numerically lower in patients of Western (5% v 22%) and Asian origin (5% v 19%). When comparing KEYNOTE-059/061 WES data with the TCGA data set, the GS subtype prevalence was numerically higher (36% v 21%) in patients of Western or Asian origin. Among subtypes in KEYNOTE-059/061, HRD scores and TMB trended highest in CIN and MSI-H subtypes, respectively. TP53 mutation was the most prevalent genomic characteristic per KEYNOTE-059/061/062 combined analysis in patients of Western or Asian origin. Gene expression signature distributions were generally similar between patients of Western and Asian origin.CONCLUSIONNumerical differences in the prevalence of MSI-H and GS subtypes were observed between early-stage and late-stage GC. Genomic characteristics of late-stage GC were generally similar between patients of Western and Asian origin. © 2025 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Journal Title: JCO Precision Oncology
Volume: 9
ISSN: 2473-4284
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology  
Date Published: 2025-03-01
Start Page: e2400456
Language: English
DOI: 10.1200/po-24-00456
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11949223
PUBMED: 40117530
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Yelena Yuriy Janjigian
    393 Janjigian