Abstract

<div>AbstractPurpose:<p>Radiation-induced sarcomas (RIS) have a poor prognosis and lack effective treatments. Its genome and tumor microenvironment are not well characterized and need further exploration.</p>Experimental Design:<p>Here, we performed whole-exome sequencing (WES) and mRNA sequencing (mRNA-seq) on patients with RIS and primary sarcomas (WES samples 46 vs. 48, mRNA-seq samples 16 vs. 8, mainly in head and neck), investigated the antitumor effect of programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade in RIS patient-derived xenograft models, and analyzed clinical data of patients with RIS treated with chemotherapy alone or combined with an anti–PD-1 antibody.</p>Results:<p>Compared with primary sarcomas, RIS manifested different patterns of copy-number variations, a significantly higher number of predicted strong MHC-binding neoantigens, and significantly increased immune cell infiltration. Clinical data showed that the combinatorial use of chemotherapy and PD-1 blockade achieved a higher objective response rate (36.67% vs. 8.00%; <i>P</i> = 0.003), longer overall survival (31.9 months vs. 14.8 months; <i>P</i> = 0.014), and longer progression-free survival (4.7 months vs. 9.5 months; <i>P</i> = 0.032) in patients with RIS compared with single chemotherapy.</p>Conclusions:<p>Elevated genomic instability and higher immune cell infiltrations were found in RIS than in primary sarcomas. Moreover, higher efficacy of chemotherapy plus PD-1 blockade was observed in animal experiments and clinical practice. This evidence indicated the promising application of immune checkpoint inhibitors in the treatment of RIS.</p></div>

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