Abstract

Radiotherapy plays an integral role in the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Although proteins involved in DNA repair may predict HNSCC response to radiotherapy, none has been validated in this context. We examined whether differential expression of double-strand DNA break (DSB) repair proteins in HNSCC, the chief mediators of DNA repair following irradiation, predict for treatment outcomes. Archival HNSCC tumor specimens (n = 89) were assembled onto a tissue microarray and stained with antibodies raised against 38 biomarkers. The biomarker set was enriched for proteins involved in DSB repair, in addition to established mechanistic markers of radioresistance. Staining was correlated with treatment response and survival alongside established clinical and pathologic covariates. Results were validated in an independent intramural cohort (n = 34). Ku80, a key mediator of DSB repair, correlated most closely with clinical outcomes. Ku80 was overexpressed in half of all tumors, and its expression was independent of all other covariates examined. Ku80 overexpression was an independent predictor for both locoregional failure and mortality following radiotherapy (P < 0.01). The predictive power of Ku80 overexpression was confined largely to HPV-negative HNSCC, where it conferred a nine-fold greater risk of death at two years. Ku80 overexpression is a common feature of HNSCC, and is a candidate DNA repair-related biomarker for radiation treatment failure and death, particularly in patients with high-risk HPV-negative disease. It is a promising, mechanistically rational biomarker to select individual HPV-negative HNSCC patients for strategies to intensify treatment.

Highlights

  • Radiotherapy, with or without concurrent chemotherapy, is the standard organ-preserving treatment of locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC)

  • Ku80 overexpression is a common feature of HNSCC, and is a candidate DNA repairrelated biomarker for radiation treatment failure and death, in patients with high-risk HPVnegative disease

  • A list of all HNSCC patients treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Texas M

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Summary

Introduction

Radiotherapy, with or without concurrent chemotherapy, is the standard organ-preserving treatment of locally advanced HNSCC.

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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