Abstract

BackgroundIdentification of patients who likely will or will not benefit from cytotoxic chemotherapy through the use of biomarkers could greatly improve clinical management by better defining appropriate treatment options for patients. microRNAs may be potentially useful biomarkers that help guide individualized therapy for cancer because microRNA expression is dysregulated in cancer. In order to identify miRNA signatures for gastric cancer and for predicting clinical resistance to cisplatin/fluorouracil (CF) chemotherapy, a comprehensive miRNA microarray analysis was performed using endoscopic biopsy samples.MethodsBiopsy samples were collected prior to chemotherapy from 90 gastric cancer patients treated with CF and from 34 healthy volunteers. At the time of disease progression, post-treatment samples were additionally collected from 8 clinical responders. miRNA expression was determined using a custom-designed Agilent microarray. In order to identify a miRNA signature for chemotherapy resistance, we correlated miRNA expression levels with the time to progression (TTP) of disease after CF therapy.ResultsA miRNA signature distinguishing gastric cancer from normal stomach epithelium was identified. 30 miRNAs were significantly inversely correlated with TTP whereas 28 miRNAs were significantly positively correlated with TTP of 82 cancer patients (P<0.05). Prominent among the upregulated miRNAs associated with chemosensitivity were miRNAs known to regulate apoptosis, including let-7g, miR-342, miR-16, miR-181, miR-1, and miR-34. When this 58-miRNA predictor was applied to a separate set of pre- and post-treatment tumor samples from the 8 clinical responders, all of the 8 pre-treatment samples were correctly predicted as low-risk, whereas samples from the post-treatment tumors that developed chemoresistance were predicted to be in the high-risk category by the 58 miRNA signature, suggesting that selection for the expression of these miRNAs occurred as chemoresistance arose.ConclusionsWe have identified 1) a miRNA expression signature that distinguishes gastric cancer from normal stomach epithelium from healthy volunteers, and 2) a chemoreresistance miRNA expression signature that is correlated with TTP after CF therapy. The chemoresistance miRNA expression signature includes several miRNAs previously shown to regulate apoptosis in vitro, and warrants further validation.

Highlights

  • Identification of patients who likely will or will not benefit from cytotoxic chemotherapy through the use of biomarkers could greatly improve clinical management by better defining appropriate treatment options for patients. microRNAs may be potentially useful biomarkers that help guide individualized therapy for cancer because microRNA expression is dysregulated in cancer

  • We have identified a second signature that is correlated with the time to progression (TTP) for gastric cancer patients treated with cisplatin and fluorouracil (CF), a reference chemotherapy regime for gastric cancer

  • All patients had metastatic disease at the time of enrollment and after endoscopic biopsy tissue samples were collected, the patients were treated with cisplatin and fluorouracil combination chemotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Identification of patients who likely will or will not benefit from cytotoxic chemotherapy through the use of biomarkers could greatly improve clinical management by better defining appropriate treatment options for patients. microRNAs may be potentially useful biomarkers that help guide individualized therapy for cancer because microRNA expression is dysregulated in cancer. Only one published high-throughput microarray analysis has evaluated miRNA expression signatures as predictors of chemotherapy resistance in metastatic solid tumor patients [5]. In this miRNA microarray study of stage III-IV ovarian cancers, let-7i expression was found to be significantly reduced in 27 chemotherapy-resistant patients as compared to 42 complete responders, there was no independent validation cohort [5]. We have identified a second signature that is correlated with the time to progression (TTP) for gastric cancer patients treated with cisplatin and fluorouracil (CF), a reference chemotherapy regime for gastric cancer These miRNA signatures may be useful as potential biomarkers to help in the diagnosis of gastric cancer in difficult cases and to predict response of gastric cancer patients to CF therapy

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