Abstract

463 Background: Our previous single-center study showed that expression levels of ERCC1 (a nucleotide excision repair pathway gene) and DPD (a pyrimidine catabolic pathway gene) in liver metastases from colorectal cancers (CRCs) were significantly higher in patients given oxaliplatin as first-line chemotherapy than those not given oxaliplatin. We conducted this multicenter study to validate our findings and better define a basic rationale for second-line therapy for metastatic CRC resistant to first-line therapy. Methods: Irinotecan-naive patients with mCRC (n = 190) were enrolled at 17 sites in Japan. Resected liver metastases were available for 91 patients who had received FOLFOX (or FOLFOX plus bevacizumab; FOLFOX group) and 99 who had not received oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy (non-oxaliplatin group). We measured mRNA expression levels of ERCC1 and DPD by real-time RT-PCR. Protein expression levels of ERCC1 and DPD were evaluated immunohistochemically. The methylation level of the long interspersed nucleotide element-1 (LINE-1; a surrogate m arker of global DNA methylation) was determined by pyrosequencing. Results: The median age at liver resection was 64 years (range, 32–89). Baseline features (e.g., sex, histology) were similar in the groups. Expression levels of DPD at the mRNA and protein levels were significantly higher in the FOLFOX group than in the non-oxaliplatin group (p < 0.05). The mRNA expression level of ERCC1 was slightly, but not significantly higher in the FOLFOX group than in the non-oxaliplatin group (p = 0.053). Interestingly, ERCC1 expression levels correlated with DPD expression levels (r = 0.38, p< 0.0001). LINE-1 methylation levels were similar in the groups. Conclusions: This multicenter study confirmed increased expression levels of DPD after first-line oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy, which may affect chemosensitivity to subsequent therapy. ERCC1 expression and epigenetic control by mechanisms such as aberrant promoter methylation of specific genes warrant further investigation.

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