Abstract

Recent studies suggest that cancer stemness drives the acquired drug resistance process in cancer therapy. The complementary information provided by multi-omics data can help us to gain a deeper understanding of this process. This study aims to elucidate the impact of cancer stemness on the frontline treatment of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). Consensus clustering based on stem/progenitor signatures refined 3 subgroups in 1,730 tumor samples. We identified master regulons that regulate cancer stemness phenotypes, including key transcription factors, DNA methyltransferases, and promoter methylation probes. In addition, we compared the clinicopathological traits, genomic heterogeneity, cancer hallmarks, tumor microenvironment (TME), and oncological prognosis of the stemness subgroups. Cancer stemness was correlated with reduced efficiency of immune checkpoint blockade therapy. Cancer stemness profoundly affects the prognosis and treatment outcome of ccRCC by increasing genomic instability, tumor-associated malignant events, and immunosuppressive factors. For clinical application, we established and validated a 243-gene signature from stem/progenitor-related genes to distinguish anti-PD-1 outcomes. Overall, this presented study suggested that cancer stemness leads to adaptive resistance to anti-PD-1 treatment in CD8+ T-infiltrated ccRCC and provides a new reference for strategy development to further improve immunotherapy response rates.

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