Abstract

AimsGastric cancer is a common and heterogeneous disease; however, global standard and biomarkers for selecting chemotherapy regimens have not been established. This study was designed retrospectively to identify molecular biomarkers for irinotecan plus S-1 (IRI-S) and S-1 therapy from subset analyses in GC0301/TOP-002, a randomised phase III trial for advanced gastric cancer. Materials and methodsParaffin-embedded primary tumour specimens were collected from 126 of 326 randomised patients in GC0301/TOP-002. The mRNA was measured for thymidylate synthase, dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, topoisomerase I, excision repair cross-complementing gene 1 (ERCC1) and thymidine phosphorylase; categorised into low and high to analyse their association with efficacy end points. ResultsThere was no significant difference in each mRNA between S-1 and IRI-S groups, whereas there were differences among some clinical characteristics. Multivariate analyses for overall survival showed that mRNA levels were not correlated with prognosis. By comparison, between IRI-S and S-1 arms, low thymidylate synthase, low ERCC1 and high thymidine phosphorylase were associated with better prognosis for IRI-S versus S-1 (hazard ratio = 0.653, 0.702 and 0.709, respectively; P < 0.15 for each interaction). ConclusionLow thymidylate synthase, low ERCC1 and high thymidine phosphorylase are candidates for predictive biomarkers for first-line treatment in advanced gastric cancer by IRI-S. Further study is warranted to confirm these results in other clinical trials and cohort studies.

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