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1.
Gut ; 73(3): 496-508, 2024 Feb 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37758326

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Cytotoxic agents are the cornerstone of treatment for patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA), despite heterogeneous benefit. We hypothesised that the pretreatment molecular profiles of diagnostic biopsies can predict patient benefit from chemotherapy and define molecular bases of innate chemoresistance. DESIGN: We identified a cohort of advanced iCCA patients with comparable baseline characteristics who diverged as extreme outliers on chemotherapy (survival <6 m in rapid progressors, RP; survival >23 m in long survivors, LS). Diagnostic biopsies were characterised by digital pathology, then subjected to whole-transcriptome profiling of bulk and geospatially macrodissected tissue regions. Spatial transcriptomics of tumour-infiltrating myeloid cells was performed using targeted digital spatial profiling (GeoMx). Transcriptome signatures were evaluated in multiple cohorts of resected cancers. Signatures were also characterised using in vitro cell lines, in vivo mouse models and single cell RNA-sequencing data. RESULTS: Pretreatment transcriptome profiles differentiated patients who would become RPs or LSs on chemotherapy. Biologically, this signature originated from altered tumour-myeloid dynamics, implicating tumour-induced immune tolerogenicity with poor response to chemotherapy. The central role of the liver microenviroment was confrmed by the association of the RPLS transcriptome signature with clinical outcome in iCCA but not extrahepatic CCA, and in liver metastasis from colorectal cancer, but not in the matched primary bowel tumours. CONCLUSIONS: The RPLS signature could be a novel metric of chemotherapy outcome in iCCA. Further development and validation of this transcriptomic signature is warranted to develop precision chemotherapy strategies in these settings.


Subject(s)
Bile Duct Neoplasms , Cholangiocarcinoma , Humans , Animals , Mice , Cholangiocarcinoma/drug therapy , Cholangiocarcinoma/genetics , Cholangiocarcinoma/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling , Transcriptome , Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic/metabolism , Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic/pathology , Bile Duct Neoplasms/drug therapy , Bile Duct Neoplasms/genetics , Bile Duct Neoplasms/metabolism
2.
Lancet Oncol ; 25(2): 198-211, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38301689

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tumour-infiltrating CD8+ cytotoxic T cells confer favourable prognosis in colorectal cancer. The added prognostic value of other infiltrating immune cells is unclear and so we sought to investigate their prognostic value in two large clinical trial cohorts. METHODS: We used multiplex immunofluorescent staining of tissue microarrays to assess the densities of CD8+, CD20+, FoxP3+, and CD68+ cells in the intraepithelial and intrastromal compartments from tumour samples of patients with stage II-III colorectal cancer from the SCOT trial (ISRCTN59757862), which examined 3 months versus 6 months of adjuvant oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, and from the QUASAR 2 trial (ISRCTN45133151), which compared adjuvant capecitabine with or without bevacizumab. Both trials included patients aged 18 years or older with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0-1. Immune marker predictors were analysed by multiple regression, and the prognostic and predictive values of markers for colorectal cancer recurrence-free interval by Cox regression were assessed using the SCOT cohort for discovery and QUASAR 2 cohort for validation. FINDINGS: After exclusion of cases without tissue microarrays and with technical failures, and following quality control, we included 2340 cases from the SCOT trial and 1069 from the QUASAR 2 trial in our analysis. Univariable analysis of associations with recurrence-free interval in cases from the SCOT trial showed a strong prognostic value of intraepithelial CD8 (CD8IE) as a continuous variable (hazard ratio [HR] for 75th vs 25th percentile [75vs25] 0·73 [95% CI 0·68-0·79], p=2·5 × 10-16), and of intrastromal FoxP3 (FoxP3IS; 0·71 [0·64-0·78], p=1·5 × 10-13) but not as strongly in the epithelium (FoxP3IE; 0·89 [0·84-0·96], p=1·5 × 10-4). Associations of other markers with recurrence-free interval were moderate. CD8IE and FoxP3IS retained independent prognostic value in bivariable and multivariable analysis, and, compared with either marker alone, a composite marker including both markers (CD8IE-FoxP3IS) was superior when assessed as a continuous variable (adjusted [a]HR75 vs 25 0·70 [95% CI 0·63-0·78], p=5·1 × 10-11) and when categorised into low, intermediate, and high density groups using previously published cutpoints (aHR for intermediate vs high 1·68 [95% CI 1·29-2·20], p=1·3 × 10-4; low vs high 2·58 [1·91-3·49], p=7·9 × 10-10), with performance similar to the gold-standard Immunoscore. The prognostic value of CD8IE-FoxP3IS was confirmed in cases from the QUASAR 2 trial, both as a continuous variable (aHR75 vs 25 0·84 [95% CI 0·73-0·96], p=0·012) and as a categorical variable for low versus high density (aHR 1·80 [95% CI 1·17-2·75], p=0·0071) but not for intermediate versus high (1·30 [0·89-1·88], p=0·17). INTERPRETATION: Combined evaluation of CD8IE and FoxP3IS could help to refine risk stratification in colorectal cancer. Investigation of FoxP3IS cells as an immunotherapy target in colorectal cancer might be merited. FUNDING: Medical Research Council, National Institute for Health Research, Cancer Research UK, Swedish Cancer Society, Roche, and Promedica Foundation.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Prognosis , Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating , Forkhead Transcription Factors/therapeutic use , Neoplasm Staging
3.
Gut ; 70(3): 544-554, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32690604

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Complex phenotypes captured on histological slides represent the biological processes at play in individual cancers, but the link to underlying molecular classification has not been clarified or systematised. In colorectal cancer (CRC), histological grading is a poor predictor of disease progression, and consensus molecular subtypes (CMSs) cannot be distinguished without gene expression profiling. We hypothesise that image analysis is a cost-effective tool to associate complex features of tissue organisation with molecular and outcome data and to resolve unclassifiable or heterogeneous cases. In this study, we present an image-based approach to predict CRC CMS from standard H&E sections using deep learning. DESIGN: Training and evaluation of a neural network were performed using a total of n=1206 tissue sections with comprehensive multi-omic data from three independent datasets (training on FOCUS trial, n=278 patients; test on rectal cancer biopsies, GRAMPIAN cohort, n=144 patients; and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), n=430 patients). Ground truth CMS calls were ascertained by matching random forest and single sample predictions from CMS classifier. RESULTS: Image-based CMS (imCMS) accurately classified slides in unseen datasets from TCGA (n=431 slides, AUC)=0.84) and rectal cancer biopsies (n=265 slides, AUC=0.85). imCMS spatially resolved intratumoural heterogeneity and provided secondary calls correlating with bioinformatic prediction from molecular data. imCMS classified samples previously unclassifiable by RNA expression profiling, reproduced the expected correlations with genomic and epigenetic alterations and showed similar prognostic associations as transcriptomic CMS. CONCLUSION: This study shows that a prediction of RNA expression classifiers can be made from H&E images, opening the door to simple, cheap and reliable biological stratification within routine workflows.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Deep Learning , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/genetics , RNA/genetics , Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics , Biopsy , Consensus , Datasets as Topic , Disease Progression , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Neoplasm Grading , Phenotype , Predictive Value of Tests , Prognosis
4.
Lancet ; 395(10221): 350-360, 2020 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32007170

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Improved markers of prognosis are needed to stratify patients with early-stage colorectal cancer to refine selection of adjuvant therapy. The aim of the present study was to develop a biomarker of patient outcome after primary colorectal cancer resection by directly analysing scanned conventional haematoxylin and eosin stained sections using deep learning. METHODS: More than 12 000 000 image tiles from patients with a distinctly good or poor disease outcome from four cohorts were used to train a total of ten convolutional neural networks, purpose-built for classifying supersized heterogeneous images. A prognostic biomarker integrating the ten networks was determined using patients with a non-distinct outcome. The marker was tested on 920 patients with slides prepared in the UK, and then independently validated according to a predefined protocol in 1122 patients treated with single-agent capecitabine using slides prepared in Norway. All cohorts included only patients with resectable tumours, and a formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumour tissue block available for analysis. The primary outcome was cancer-specific survival. FINDINGS: 828 patients from four cohorts had a distinct outcome and were used as a training cohort to obtain clear ground truth. 1645 patients had a non-distinct outcome and were used for tuning. The biomarker provided a hazard ratio for poor versus good prognosis of 3·84 (95% CI 2·72-5·43; p<0·0001) in the primary analysis of the validation cohort, and 3·04 (2·07-4·47; p<0·0001) after adjusting for established prognostic markers significant in univariable analyses of the same cohort, which were pN stage, pT stage, lymphatic invasion, and venous vascular invasion. INTERPRETATION: A clinically useful prognostic marker was developed using deep learning allied to digital scanning of conventional haematoxylin and eosin stained tumour tissue sections. The assay has been extensively evaluated in large, independent patient populations, correlates with and outperforms established molecular and morphological prognostic markers, and gives consistent results across tumour and nodal stage. The biomarker stratified stage II and III patients into sufficiently distinct prognostic groups that potentially could be used to guide selection of adjuvant treatment by avoiding therapy in very low risk groups and identifying patients who would benefit from more intensive treatment regimes. FUNDING: The Research Council of Norway.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Deep Learning , Aged , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Cohort Studies , Colorectal Neoplasms/mortality , Colorectal Neoplasms/therapy , Early Detection of Cancer/methods , Eosine Yellowish-(YS)/metabolism , Female , Hematoxylin/metabolism , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis , Prospective Studies
5.
Histopathology ; 79(6): 947-956, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34174109

ABSTRACT

AIMS: After local excision of early rectal cancer, definitive lymph node status is not available. An alternative means for accurate assessment of recurrence risk is required to determine the most appropriate subsequent management. Currently used measures are suboptimal. We assess three measures of tumour stromal content to determine their predictive value after local excision in a well-characterised cohort of rectal cancer patients without prior radiotherapy. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 143 patients were included. Haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) sections were scanned for (i) deep neural network (DNN, a machine-learning algorithm) tumour segmentation into compartments including desmoplastic stroma and inflamed stroma; and (ii) digital assessment of tumour stromal fraction (TSR) and optical DNA ploidy analysis. 3' mRNA sequencing was performed to obtain gene expression data from which stromal and immune scores were calculated using the ESTIMATE method. Full results were available for 139 samples and compared with disease-free survival. All three methods were prognostic. Most strongly predictive was a DNN-determined ratio of desmoplastic to inflamed stroma >5.41 (P < 0.0001). A ratio of ESTIMATE stromal to immune score <1.19 was also predictive of disease-free survival (P = 0.00051), as was stromal fraction >36.5% (P = 0.037). CONCLUSIONS: The DNN-determined ratio of desmoplastic to inflamed ratio is a novel and powerful predictor of disease recurrence in locally excised early rectal cancer. It can be assessed on a single H&E section, so could be applied in routine clinical practice to improve the prognostic information available to patients and clinicians to inform the decision concerning further management.


Subject(s)
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology , Rectal Neoplasms/pathology , Stromal Cells/pathology , Tumor Microenvironment , Aged , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Neural Networks, Computer , Rectal Neoplasms/surgery , Retrospective Studies
6.
Gut ; 69(6): 1092-1103, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31563876

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Pathological Wnt pathway activation is a conserved hallmark of colorectal cancer. Wnt-activating mutations can be divided into: i) ligand-independent (LI) alterations in intracellular signal transduction proteins (Adenomatous polyposis coli, ß-catenin), causing constitutive pathway activation and ii) ligand-dependent (LD) mutations affecting the synergistic R-Spondin axis (RNF43, RSPO-fusions) acting through amplification of endogenous Wnt signal transmembrane transduction. Our aim was to exploit differential Wnt target gene expression to generate a mutation-agnostic biomarker for LD tumours. DESIGN: We undertook harmonised multi-omic analysis of discovery (n=684) and validation cohorts (n=578) of colorectal tumours collated from publicly available data and the Stratification in Colorectal Cancer Consortium. We used mutation data to establish molecular ground truth and subdivide lesions into LI/LD tumour subsets. We contrasted transcriptional, methylation, morphological and clinical characteristics between groups. RESULTS: Wnt disrupting mutations were mutually exclusive. Desmoplastic stromal upregulation of RSPO may compensate for absence of epithelial mutation in a subset of stromal-rich tumours. Key Wnt negative regulator genes were differentially expressed between LD/LI tumours, with targeted hypermethylation of some genes (AXIN2, NKD1) occurring even in CIMP-negative LD cancers. AXIN2 mRNA expression was used as a discriminatory molecular biomarker to distinguish LD/LI tumours (area under the curve >0.93). CONCLUSIONS: Epigenetic suppression of appropriate Wnt negative feedback loops is selectively advantageous in LD tumours and differential AXIN2 expression in LD/LI lesions can be exploited as a molecular biomarker. Distinguishing between LD/LI tumour types is important; patients with LD tumours retain sensitivity to Wnt ligand inhibition and may be stratified at diagnosis to clinical trials of Porcupine inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Signal Transduction/genetics , Wnt1 Protein/metabolism , Aged , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/genetics , Genetic Markers/genetics , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Wnt1 Protein/genetics
7.
Br J Cancer ; 123(8): 1280-1288, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32684627

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Immunohistochemical quantification of the immune response is prognostic for colorectal cancer (CRC). Here, we evaluate the suitability of alternative immune classifiers on prognosis and assess whether they relate to biological features amenable to targeted therapy. METHODS: Overall survival by immune (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20 and FOXP3) and immune-checkpoint (ICOS, IDO-1 and PD-L1) biomarkers in independent CRC cohorts was evaluated. Matched mutational and transcriptomic data were interrogated to identify associated biology. RESULTS: Determination of immune-cold tumours by combined low-density cell counts of CD3, CD4 and CD8 immunohistochemistry constituted the best prognosticator across stage II-IV CRC, particularly in patients with stage IV disease (HR 1.98 [95% CI: 1.47-2.67]). These immune-cold CRCs were associated with tumour hypoxia, confirmed using CAIX immunohistochemistry (P = 0.0009), which may mediate disease progression through common biology (KRAS mutations, CRIS-B subtype and SPP1 mRNA overexpression). CONCLUSIONS: Given the significantly poorer survival of immune-cold CRC patients, these data illustrate that assessment of CD4-expressing cells complements low CD3 and CD8 immunohistochemical quantification in the tumour bulk, potentially facilitating immunophenotyping of patient biopsies to predict prognosis. In addition, we found immune-cold CRCs to associate with a difficult-to-treat, poor prognosis hypoxia signature, indicating that these patients may benefit from hypoxia-targeting clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/mortality , Tumor Hypoxia/physiology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , CD3 Complex/analysis , CD4 Antigens/analysis , CD8 Antigens/analysis , Colorectal Neoplasms/immunology , Female , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis
9.
Br J Cancer ; 121(6): 474-482, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31388185

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Intratumoural T-cell infiltrate intensity cortes wrelaith clinical outcome in stage II/III colorectal cancer (CRC). We aimed to determine whether this association varies across this heterogeneous group. METHODS: We performed a pooled analysis of 1804 CRCs from the QUASAR2 and VICTOR trials. Intratumoural CD8+ and CD3+ densities were quantified by immunohistochemistry in tissue microarray (TMA) cores, and their association with clinical outcome analysed by Cox regression. We validated our results using publicly available gene expression data in a pooled analysis of 1375 CRCs from seven independent series. RESULTS: In QUASAR2, intratumoural CD8+ was a stronger predictor of CRC recurrence than CD3+ and showed similar discriminative ability to both markers in combination. Pooled multivariable analysis of both trials showed increasing CD8+ density was associated with reduced recurrence risk independent of confounders including DNA mismatch repair deficiency, POLE mutation and chromosomal instability (multivariable hazard ratio [HR] for each two-fold increase = 0.92, 95%CI = 0.87-0.97, P = 3.6 × 10-3). This association was not uniform across risk strata defined by tumour and nodal stage: absent in low-risk (pT3,N0) cases (HR = 1.03, 95%CI = 0.87-1.21, P = 0.75), modest in intermediate-risk (pT4,N0 or pT1-3,N1-2) cases (HR = 0.92, 95%CI = 0.86-1.0, P = 0.046) and strong in high-risk (pT4,N1-2) cases (HR = 0.87, 95%CI = 0.79-0.97, P = 9.4 × 10-3); PINTERACTION = 0.090. Analysis of tumour CD8A expression in the independent validation cohort revealed similar variation in prognostic value across risk strata (PINTERACTION = 0.048). CONCLUSIONS: The prognostic value of intratumoural CD8+ cell infiltration in stage II/III CRC varies across tumour and nodal risk strata.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Colorectal Neoplasms/immunology , Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating/immunology , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/immunology , Aged , Bevacizumab/administration & dosage , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/drug effects , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/pathology , Capecitabine/administration & dosage , Cohort Studies , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Lactones/administration & dosage , Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating/drug effects , Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating/pathology , Male , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/drug therapy , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology , Neoplasm Staging , Sulfones/administration & dosage , Survival Rate
10.
Nature ; 494(7438): 492-496, 2013 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23446422

ABSTRACT

Cancer chromosomal instability (CIN) results in an increased rate of change of chromosome number and structure and generates intratumour heterogeneity. CIN is observed in most solid tumours and is associated with both poor prognosis and drug resistance. Understanding a mechanistic basis for CIN is therefore paramount. Here we find evidence for impaired replication fork progression and increased DNA replication stress in CIN(+) colorectal cancer (CRC) cells relative to CIN(-) CRC cells, with structural chromosome abnormalities precipitating chromosome missegregation in mitosis. We identify three new CIN-suppressor genes (PIGN (also known as MCD4), MEX3C (RKHD2) and ZNF516 (KIAA0222)) encoded on chromosome 18q that are subject to frequent copy number loss in CIN(+) CRC. Chromosome 18q loss was temporally associated with aneuploidy onset at the adenoma-carcinoma transition. CIN-suppressor gene silencing leads to DNA replication stress, structural chromosome abnormalities and chromosome missegregation. Supplementing cells with nucleosides, to alleviate replication-associated damage, reduces the frequency of chromosome segregation errors after CIN-suppressor gene silencing, and attenuates segregation errors and DNA damage in CIN(+) cells. These data implicate a central role for replication stress in the generation of structural and numerical CIN, which may inform new therapeutic approaches to limit intratumour heterogeneity.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , DNA Replication/genetics , Aneuploidy , Cell Line, Tumor , Chromosomal Instability/drug effects , Chromosome Segregation/drug effects , Chromosome Segregation/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 18/drug effects , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 18/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , DNA Copy Number Variations/genetics , DNA Damage/drug effects , DNA Damage/genetics , DNA Replication/drug effects , Gene Deletion , Gene Silencing , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Humans , Mitosis/drug effects , Nucleosides/pharmacology , Phosphotransferases/genetics , RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics
11.
Mol Syst Biol ; 13(11): 951, 2017 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29101300

ABSTRACT

Most molecular cancer therapies act on protein targets but data on the proteome status of patients and cellular models for proteome-guided pre-clinical drug sensitivity studies are only beginning to emerge. Here, we profiled the proteomes of 65 colorectal cancer (CRC) cell lines to a depth of > 10,000 proteins using mass spectrometry. Integration with proteomes of 90 CRC patients and matched transcriptomics data defined integrated CRC subtypes, highlighting cell lines representative of each tumour subtype. Modelling the responses of 52 CRC cell lines to 577 drugs as a function of proteome profiles enabled predicting drug sensitivity for cell lines and patients. Among many novel associations, MERTK was identified as a predictive marker for resistance towards MEK1/2 inhibitors and immunohistochemistry of 1,074 CRC tumours confirmed MERTK as a prognostic survival marker. We provide the proteomic and pharmacological data as a resource to the community to, for example, facilitate the design of innovative prospective clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , c-Mer Tyrosine Kinase/genetics , Biomarkers, Tumor/antagonists & inhibitors , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Colorectal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/mortality , Gene Regulatory Networks , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , MAP Kinase Kinase 1/antagonists & inhibitors , MAP Kinase Kinase 1/genetics , MAP Kinase Kinase 1/metabolism , MAP Kinase Kinase 2/antagonists & inhibitors , MAP Kinase Kinase 2/genetics , MAP Kinase Kinase 2/metabolism , Pharmacogenetics/methods , Prognosis , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Proteomics/methods , Signal Transduction , Survival Analysis , c-Mer Tyrosine Kinase/antagonists & inhibitors , c-Mer Tyrosine Kinase/metabolism
12.
Respir Res ; 18(1): 85, 2017 05 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28477618

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) associated with lung disease has the worst prognosis of all types of PH. Pulmonary arterial vasculopathy is an early event in the natural history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD). The present study characterized the alterations in the structure and function of the pulmonary arterial (PA) wall of COPD and ILD candidates for lung transplantation (LTx). METHODS: A cohort of 73 patients, 63 pre-LTx (30 COPD, 33 ILD), and ten controls underwent simultaneous right heart catheterisation and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). Total pulmonary resistance (TPR), capacitance (Cp), and the TPR-Cp relationship were assessed. PA stiffness and the relative area of wall thickness were estimated as pulse PA pressure/IVUS pulsatility and as [(external sectional area-intimal area)/external sectional area] × 100, respectively. RESULTS: Twenty-seven percent of patients had pulmonary arterial wedge pressure > 15 mmHg and were not analyzed. PA stiffness and the area of wall thickness were increased in comparison with controls, even in patients without PH (p < 0.05). ILD patients showed a significant higher PA stiffness, and lower Cp beyond mean PA pressure (mPAP) and lower area of wall thickness than COPD patients (p < 0.05). TPR-Cp relationship was shifted downward left for ILD patients. CONCLUSIONS: Significant increase of PA stiffness and area of wall thickness were present even in patients without PH and can make the diagnosis of pulmonary vasculopathy at a preclinical stage in PH-lung disease candidates for LTx. ILD patients showed the worst PA stiffness and Cp with respect to COPD.


Subject(s)
Hypertension, Pulmonary/physiopathology , Lung Diseases, Interstitial/physiopathology , Pulmonary Artery/physiopathology , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/physiopathology , Pulmonary Wedge Pressure , Vascular Stiffness , Female , Humans , Hypertension, Pulmonary/etiology , Hypertension, Pulmonary/prevention & control , Lung Diseases, Interstitial/complications , Lung Diseases, Interstitial/surgery , Lung Transplantation , Male , Middle Aged , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/complications , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/surgery , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
13.
Lancet Oncol ; 17(11): 1543-1557, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27660192

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Antiangiogenic agents have established efficacy in the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer. We investigated whether bevacizumab could improve disease-free survival in the adjuvant setting after resection of the primary tumour. METHODS: For the open-label, randomised, controlled QUASAR 2 trial, which was done at 170 hospitals in seven countries, we recruited patients aged 18 years or older with WHO performance status scores of 0 or 1 who had undergone potentially curative surgery for histologically proven stage III or high-risk stage II colorectal cancer. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive eight 3-week cycles of oral capecitabine alone (1250 mg/m2 twice daily for 14 days followed by a break for 7 days) or the same regimen of oral capecitabine plus 16 cycles of 7·5 mg/kg bevacizumab by intravenous infusion over 90 min on day 1 of each cycle. Randomisation was done by a computer-generated schedule with use of minimisation with a random element stratified by age, disease stage, tumour site, and country. The study was open label and no-one was masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was 3-year disease-free survival, assessed in the intention-to-treat population. Toxic effects were assessed in patients who received at least one dose of randomised treatment. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN45133151. FINDINGS: Between April 25, 2005, and Oct 12, 2010, 1952 eligible patients were enrolled, of whom 1941 had assessable data (968 in the capecitabine alone group and 973 in the capecitabine and bevacizumab group). Median follow-up was 4·92 years (IQR 4·00-5·16). Disease-free survival at 3 years did not differ between the groups (75·4%, 95% CI 72·5-78·0 in the capecitabine and bevacizumab group vs 78·4%, 75·7-80·9 in the capecitabine alone group; hazard ratio 1·06, 95% CI 0·89-1·25, p=0·54). The most common grade 3-4 adverse events were hand-foot syndrome (201 [21%] of 963 in the capecitabine alone group vs 257 [27%] of 959 in the capecitabine and bevacizumab group) and diarrhoea (102 [11%] vs 104 [11%]), and, with the addition of bevacizumab, expected increases were recorded in all-grade hypertension (320 [33%] vs 75 [8%]), proteinuria (197 [21%] vs 49 [5%]), and wound healing problems (30 [3%] vs 17 [2%]). 571 serious adverse events were reported (221 with capecitabine alone and 350 with capecitabine and bevacizumab). Most of these were gastrointestinal (n=245) or cardiovascular (n=169). 23 deaths within 6 months of randomisation were classified as being related to treatment, eight in the capecitabine alone group and 15 in the capecitabine and bevacizumab group. INTERPRETATION: The addition of bevacizumab to capecitabine in the adjuvant setting for colorectal cancer yielded no benefit in the treatment of an unselected population and should not be used. FUNDING: Roche.


Subject(s)
Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic/therapeutic use , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , Capecitabine/therapeutic use , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Aged , Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic/adverse effects , Bevacizumab/administration & dosage , Bevacizumab/adverse effects , Capecitabine/administration & dosage , Capecitabine/adverse effects , Colorectal Neoplasms/mortality , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
14.
Gut ; 64(1): 111-20, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24647007

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Capecitabine is an oral 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) pro-drug commonly used to treat colorectal carcinoma and other tumours. About 35% of patients experience dose-limiting toxicity. The few proven genetic biomarkers of 5-FU toxicity are rare variants and polymorphisms, respectively, at candidate loci dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPYD) and thymidylate synthase (TYMS). DESIGN: We investigated 1456 polymorphisms and rare coding variants near 25 candidate 5-FU pathway genes in 968 UK patients from the QUASAR2 clinical trial. RESULTS: We identified the first common DPYD polymorphisms to be consistently associated with capecitabine toxicity, rs12132152 (toxicity allele frequency (TAF)=0.031, OR=3.83, p=4.31×10(-6)) and rs12022243 (TAF=0.196, OR=1.69, p=2.55×10(-5)). rs12132152 was particularly strongly associated with hand-foot syndrome (OR=6.1, p=3.6×10(-8)). The rs12132152 and rs12022243 associations were independent of each other and of previously reported DPYD toxicity variants. Next-generation sequencing additionally identified rare DPYD variant p.Ala551Thr in one patient with severe toxicity. Using functional predictions and published data, we assigned p.Ala551Thr as causal for toxicity. We found that polymorphism rs2612091, which lies within an intron of ENOSF1, was also associated with capecitabine toxicity (TAF=0.532, OR=1.59, p=5.28×10(-6)). ENSOF1 is adjacent to TYMS and there is a poorly characterised regulatory interaction between the two genes/proteins. Unexpectedly, rs2612091 fully explained the previously reported associations between capecitabine toxicity and the supposedly functional TYMS variants, 5'VNTR 2R/3R and 3'UTR 6 bp ins-del. rs2612091 genotypes were, moreover, consistently associated with ENOSF1 mRNA levels, but not with TYMS expression. CONCLUSIONS: DPYD harbours rare and common capecitabine toxicity variants. The toxicity polymorphism in the TYMS region may actually act through ENOSF1.


Subject(s)
Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic/adverse effects , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Deoxycytidine/analogs & derivatives , Dihydrouracil Dehydrogenase (NADP)/genetics , Fluorouracil/analogs & derivatives , Genetic Association Studies , Polymorphism, Genetic , Proteins/genetics , Thymidylate Synthase/genetics , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Capecitabine , Deoxycytidine/adverse effects , Female , Fluorouracil/adverse effects , Humans , Hydro-Lyases , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
15.
Hum Mol Genet ; 22(14): 2820-8, 2013 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23528559

ABSTRACT

Accurate duplication of DNA prior to cell division is essential to suppress mutagenesis and tumour development. The high fidelity of eukaryotic DNA replication is due to a combination of accurate incorporation of nucleotides into the nascent DNA strand by DNA polymerases, the recognition and removal of mispaired nucleotides (proofreading) by the exonuclease activity of DNA polymerases δ and ε, and post-replication surveillance and repair of newly synthesized DNA by the mismatch repair (MMR) apparatus. While the contribution of defective MMR to neoplasia is well recognized, evidence that faulty DNA polymerase activity is important in cancer development has been limited. We have recently shown that germline POLE and POLD1 exonuclease domain mutations (EDMs) predispose to colorectal cancer (CRC) and, in the latter case, to endometrial cancer (EC). Somatic POLE mutations also occur in 5-10% of sporadic CRCs and underlie a hypermutator, microsatellite-stable molecular phenotype. We hypothesized that sporadic ECs might also acquire somatic POLE and/or POLD1 mutations. Here, we have found that missense POLE EDMs with good evidence of pathogenic effects are present in 7% of a set of 173 endometrial cancers, although POLD1 EDMs are uncommon. The POLE mutations localized to highly conserved residues and were strongly predicted to affect proofreading. Consistent with this, POLE-mutant tumours were hypermutated, with a high frequency of base substitutions, and an especially large relative excess of G:C>T:A transversions. All POLE EDM tumours were microsatellite stable, suggesting that defects in either DNA proofreading or MMR provide alternative mechanisms to achieve genomic instability and tumourigenesis.


Subject(s)
DNA Polymerase III/genetics , DNA Polymerase II/genetics , Endometrial Neoplasms/enzymology , Mutation , Adult , Aged , Amino Acid Sequence , DNA Polymerase II/chemistry , DNA Polymerase II/metabolism , DNA Polymerase III/chemistry , DNA Polymerase III/metabolism , Endometrial Neoplasms/genetics , Female , Germ-Line Mutation , Humans , Microsatellite Repeats , Middle Aged , Molecular Sequence Data , Poly-ADP-Ribose Binding Proteins , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Alignment , Young Adult
17.
J Pathol ; 229(3): 441-8, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23165447

ABSTRACT

Molecular classification of colorectal cancer (CRC) is currently based on microsatellite instability (MSI), KRAS or BRAF mutation and, occasionally, chromosomal instability (CIN). Whilst useful, these categories may not fully represent the underlying molecular subgroups. We screened 906 stage II/III CRCs from the VICTOR clinical trial for somatic mutations. Multivariate analyses (logistic regression, clustering, Bayesian networks) identified the primary molecular associations. Positive associations occurred between: CIN and TP53 mutation; MSI and BRAF mutation; and KRAS and PIK3CA mutations. Negative associations occurred between: MSI and CIN; MSI and NRAS mutation; and KRAS mutation, and each of NRAS, TP53 and BRAF mutations. Some complex relationships were elucidated: KRAS and TP53 mutations had both a direct negative association and a weaker, confounding, positive association via TP53-CIN-MSI-BRAF-KRAS. Our results suggested a new molecular classification of CRCs: (1) MSI(+) and/or BRAF-mutant; (2) CIN(+) and/or TP53(-) mutant, with wild-type KRAS and PIK3CA; (3) KRAS- and/or PIK3CA-mutant, CIN(+) , TP53-wild-type; (4) KRAS(-) and/or PIK3CA-mutant, CIN(-) , TP53-wild-type; (5) NRAS-mutant; (6) no mutations; (7) others. As expected, group 1 cancers were mostly proximal and poorly differentiated, usually occurring in women. Unexpectedly, two different types of CIN(+) CRC were found: group 2 cancers were usually distal and occurred in men, whereas group 3 showed neither of these associations but were of higher stage. CIN(+) cancers have conventionally been associated with all three of these variables, because they have been tested en masse. Our classification also showed potentially improved prognostic capabilities, with group 3, and possibly group 1, independently predicting disease-free survival.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics , Chromosomal Instability , Colorectal Neoplasms/classification , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Molecular Diagnostic Techniques/methods , Mutation , Neoplasm Proteins/genetics , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Class I Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases , Colorectal Neoplasms/mortality , Disease-Free Survival , Female , Humans , Male , Microsatellite Instability , Middle Aged , Multivariate Analysis , Neoplasm Staging , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Sex Factors , Succinimides , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics , ras Proteins/genetics
18.
BMC Pulm Med ; 14: 69, 2014 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24762000

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Exercise capacity is impaired in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). We hypothesized that cardiovascular reserve abnormalities would be associated with impaired hemodynamic response to pharmacological stress and worse outcome in PAH. METHODS: Eighteen PAH patients (p) group 1 NYHA class II/III and ten controls underwent simultaneous right cardiac catheterization and intravascular ultrasound at rest and during low dose-dobutamine (10 mcg/kg/min) with trendelenburg (DST). We estimated cardiac output (CO), pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and capacitance (PC), and PA elastic modulus (EM). We concomitantly measured tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), RV myocardial peak systolic velocity (Sm) and isovolumic myocardial acceleration (IVA) in PAH patients. Based on the rounded mean + 2 SD of the increase in mPAP in our healthy control group during DST (2.8 + 1.8 mm Hg), PAH p were divided into two groups according to mean PA pressure (mPAP) response during DST, 1: ΔmPAP > 5 mm Hg and 2: ΔmPAP ≤ 5 mm Hg. Cardiovascular reserve was estimated as the change (delta, Δ) during DST compared with rest, including ΔmPAP with respect to ΔCO (ΔmPAP/ΔCO). All patients were prospectively followed up for 2 years. RESULTS: PAH p showed significant lower heart rate and CO increase than controls during DST, with a significant mPAP and pulse PAP increase and higher ΔmPAP/ΔCO (p < 0.05). Neither hemodynamic, IVUS and echocardiographic data were different between both PAH groups at rest. In group 1, DST caused a higher ΔEM, ΔmPAP/ΔCO, ΔPVR, and ΔTAPSE than group 2, with a lower IVA increase and a negative ΔSV (p < 0.05). TAPSE correlated with mPAP and RVP (p < 0.05) and, IVA and Sm correlated with CO (p < 0.05). ΔEM correlated with ΔmPAP and ΔIVA with ΔCO (p < 0.05). There were two deaths/pulmonary transplantations in group 1 and one death in group 2 during the follow-up (p > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Pulmonary vascular reserve and RV systolic reserve are significantly impaired in patients with PAH. The lower recruitable cardiovascular reserve is significantly related to a worse hemodynamic response to DST and it could be associated with a poor clinical outcome.


Subject(s)
Cardiac Catheterization/methods , Echocardiography, Stress/methods , Hemodynamics , Hypertension, Pulmonary/diagnosis , Stroke Volume , Ventricular Dysfunction, Right/diagnosis , Airway Resistance/physiology , Case-Control Studies , Echocardiography/methods , Exercise Tolerance/physiology , Female , Functional Residual Capacity , Humans , Hypertension, Pulmonary/mortality , Hypertension, Pulmonary/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis , Reference Values , Risk Assessment , Severity of Illness Index , Survival Rate , Ultrasonography, Interventional/methods , Vascular Resistance/physiology , Ventricular Dysfunction, Right/physiopathology
19.
Pulm Circ ; 14(1): e12348, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38449519

ABSTRACT

We analyzed the effect of respiratory swings on interpreting intravascular pulmonary vascular pressures (PVPs) in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD) candidates for lung transplantation (LTx) and the role of the alterations in pulmonary function tests on the dynamic respiratory variations. Twenty-eight consecutive patients were included. All patients underwent a complete hemodynamic study (right atrial, mean pulmonary arterial, and pulmonary arterial occlusion pressures [RAP, mPAP, and PAOP]-) and pulmonary function testing (force vital capacity [FVC], forced expiratory volume in the first second [FEV1], and residual volume [RV]). A subgroup of 10 patients underwent simultaneous esophageal pressure (PES). All hemodynamic parameters and PES were collected during apnea after an unforced expiration (ee) and during spontaneous breathing averaging five respiratory cycles (mrc). The respiratory swing (osc) was estimated as the difference between maximum-minimum values of pressures during the respiratory cycle. Intravascular RAPee, mPAPee, and PAOPee were higher than mrc values (p < 0.05), leading to 11% of pulmonary hypertension (PH) misdiagnosis and 37% of postcapillary PH misclassification. PAOPosc of COPD was higher than ILD patients and RAPosc (p < 0.05). Only PAOPosc correlated with FVC, FEV1, and RV (p < 0.05). ILD PESmrc was lower than COPD (p < 0.05), and it was associated with a significantly higher transmural than intravascular RAPmrc, mPAPmrc, and PAOPmrc. PESmrc was significantly correlated with FVC. Transmural mPAPmrc and PAOPmrc readings determined around 20% of reclassification of the patients compared to ee measurements. Candidates for LTx showed large respiratory swings in PVP, which were correlated with pulmonary function alterations. mrc PVP would be more closely approximated to the true transmural PVP leading to PH reclassification. Adjusting PVP for PES should be considered in COPD and ILD candidates of LTx with severe alterations in pulmonary functional tests and suspicion of a PESmrc far from 0. PES respiratory swings could be different in ILD to COPD patients.

20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38447610

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study investigated how isoform switching affects the cellular response to ionizing radiation (IR), an understudied area despite its relevance to radiation therapy in cancer treatment. We aimed to identify changes in transcript isoform expression post-IR exposure and the proteins mediating these changes, with a focus on their potential to modulate radiosensitivity. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Using RNA sequencing, we analyzed the B-cell lines derived from 10 healthy individuals at 3 timepoints, applying the mixture of isoforms algorithm to quantify alternative splicing. We examined RNA binding protein motifs within the sequences of IR-responsive isoforms and validated the serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 1 (SRSF1) as a predominant mediator through RNA immunoprecipitation. We further investigated the effects of SRSF1 on radiosensitivity by RNA interference and by analyzing publicly available data on patients with cancer. RESULTS: We identified ∼1900 radiation-responsive alternatively spliced isoforms. Many isoforms were differentially expressed without changes in their overall gene expression. Over a third of these transcripts underwent exon skipping, while others used proximal last exons. These IR-responsive isoforms tended to be shorter transcripts missing vital domains for preventing apoptosis and promoting cell division but retaining those necessary for DNA repair. Our combined computational, genetic, and molecular analyses identified the proto-oncogene SRSF1 as a mediator of these radiation-induced isoform-switching events that promote apoptosis. After exposure to DNA double-strand break-inducing agents, SRSF1 expression decreased. A reduction in SRSF1 increased radiosensitivity in vitro and among patients with cancer. CONCLUSIONS: We establish a pivotal role for isoform switching in the cellular response to IR and propose SRSF1 as a promising biomarker for assessing radiation therapy effectiveness.

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