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Lethal clinical outcome and immune desert contexture in refractory gastric cancer harboring CCNE1 amplification and overexpression

Menée à partir de données génomiques, transcriptomiques et cliniques portant sur 1 273 patients atteints d'un cancer gastrique, cette étude identifie les caractéristiques anatomopathologiques et immunitaires des tumeurs avec amplification ou surexpression du gène CCNE1

Background : The epithelial-mesenchymal axis frames gastric cancer heterogeneity but mainly captures phenotypic extremes. CCNE1 gain, encompassing amplification or Cyclin E1 overexpression, represents one intermediate state linked to chromosomal instability and therapeutic resistance. However, its clinicopathologic identity and immune features in gastric cancer remain insufficiently characterised.

Methods : We analysed 1273 gastric cancer patients across six independent cohorts: ZSHS (n = 453), TCGA (n = 410), ACRG (n = 300), SMC (n = 43), MSKCC (n = 22), and ZSHS NGS cohort (n = 45). Tumours were classified into CCNE1 gain, epithelial, or mesenchymal subtypes using protein, copy-number, or transcript-level data. Clinicopathologic features, survival outcomes, treatment responses, and immune contexture were evaluated across subtypes.

Results : CCNE1 gain tumours retained E-cadherin positivity but showed increased proliferation, more nerve and venous invasion. They were associated with poor prognosis and reduced response to adjuvant chemotherapy, HER2-targeted therapy, anti-angiogenic agents, and PD-1 blockade independent of epithelial-mesenchymal classification. The immune contexture exhibited an immune-desert phenotype with reduced lymphocyte infiltration, impaired cytotoxicity, increased M2 macrophage polarisation, and elevated TGF-

β.

Conclusion

:

CCNE1 gain delineates a clinic-ready, therapy-refractory subtype of gastric cancer beyond the epithelial-mesenchymal framework, representing over one in ten patients. These tumours preserve epithelial morphology yet exhibit aggressive proliferative and invasive behaviour, coupled with immune desert and myeloid-driven suppression.

British Journal of Cancer , article en libre accès, 2026

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