Frontiers in Immunology (Sep 2024)

A CD8+ T cell related immune score predicts survival and refines the risk assessment in acute myeloid leukemia

  • Zeyi Li,
  • Peng Jin,
  • Rufang Xiang,
  • Xiaoyang Li,
  • Jie Shen,
  • Mengke He,
  • Xiaxin Liu,
  • Hongming Zhu,
  • Shishuang Wu,
  • Fangyi Dong,
  • Huijin Zhao,
  • Han Liu,
  • Zhen Jin,
  • Junmin Li,
  • Junmin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1408109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Although advancements in genomic and epigenetic research have deepened our understanding of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), only one-third of patients can achieve durable remission. Growing evidence suggests that the immune microenvironment in bone marrow influences prognosis and survival in AML. There is a specific association between CD8+ T cells and the prognosis of AML patients. To develop a CD8+ T cell-related immune risk score for AML, we first evaluated the accuracy of CIBERSORTx in predicting the abundance of CD8+ T cells in bulk RNA-seq and found it significantly correlated with observed single-cell RNA sequencing data and the proportions of CD8+ T cells derived from flow cytometry. Next, we constructed the CTCG15, a 15-gene prognostic signature, using univariate and LASSO regression on the differentially expressed genes between CD8+ THigh and CD8+ TLow groups. The CTCG15 was further validated across six datasets in different platforms. The CTCG15 has been shown to be independent of established prognostic markers, and can distill transcriptomic consequences of several genetic abnormalities closely related to prognosis in AML patients. Finally, integrating this model into the 2022 European LeukemiaNet contributed to a higher predictive power for prognosis prediction. Collectively, our study demonstrates that CD8+ T cell-related signature could improve the comprehensive risk stratification and prognosis prediction in AML.

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