Abstract Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) disproportionately affects African American individuals, who experience higher incidence and mortality than non-Hispanic White patients. Immune infiltration varies widely across CRC phenotypes, particularly between microsatellite instability (MSI) and microsatellite stable (MSS) tumors. Recent single-cell studies show that MSI tumors demonstrate stronger anti-tumor immunity, with coordinated variation between immune and malignant cell types, highlighting the need for spatial analyses to understand tumor-immune interactions. Aim: To investigate spatial cellular organization in MSI and MSS tumors from African American patients using advanced computational and machine learning approaches to characterize immunomarker profiles. Methods: Spatially resolved single-cell transcriptomic profiling was performed using 10X Genomics Xenium 5k, which measures up to 5,000 genes in situ. Because such data require sophisticated processing, we employed machine learning innovations—including self-supervised learning—and robust artifact-correction tools to derive biologically meaningful signals. We introduce a pilot dataset of four CRC samples (2 MSI, 2 MSS) and present an analysis pipeline for preprocessing and annotating spatial CRC data using curated marker sets. Results: Spatial profiling revealed distinct immune-tumor ecologies across phenotypes. MSS tumors showed depleted T/NK and B-cell populations, whereas MSI tumors exhibited higher immune-cell abundance and strong cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell activity marked by elevated CXCL13, GZMA, GZMB, and GZMK expression. MSI samples also demonstrated activated T-cell programs supported by pro-inflammatory myeloid cells expressing CXCL10, consistent with an immune-hot, therapy-responsive microenvironment. In contrast, MSS tumors were fibroblast-driven and metabolically reprogrammed, characterized by high TGFB1, FAP, COL1A1, LDHA, and SLC2A1 expression, reflecting an immune-cold state with minimal T-cell infiltration. To analyze cellular communication, we applied AMICI—an interpretable attention-based model predicting a cell’s gene expression from its spatial neighbors. AMICI revealed phenotype-specific interaction patterns, neighborhood length scales, and key genes mediating immune-stromal-tumor signaling. Conclusion: This pilot study establishes an integrated spatial and computational framework for dissecting MSI-MSS differences in CRC among African American patients. Future work will expand AMICI-based analyses to further resolve neighborhood-driven phenotypes and cell-cell communication networks that shape immune infiltration and therapeutic response. Citation Format: Hassan Brim, Khushi Desai, Shweta Dixi, Justin Hong, Colles Price, Jonathan H. Chen, Nicolas Fernandez, Sara Sim, Sami Farhi, Rabia Zafar, Elham Azizi, Hassan Ashktorab. Spatial characterization of tumor-immune interactions in MMR-p and MMR-d among African American colorectal cancer patients using attention-based modeling abstract. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2026; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2026 Apr 17-22; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2026;86(7 Suppl):Abstract nr 3955.
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Hassan Brim
Khushi Desai
Shweta Dixi
Cancer Research
Howard University
Schlumberger (British Virgin Islands)
Mochida Pharmaceutical (Japan)
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Brim et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d1fd13a79560c99a0a2e69 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.am2026-3955