Abstract

The recent discovery of ‘molecular subtypes’ in human primary colorectal cancer has revealed correlations between subtype, propensity to metastasize and response to therapy. It is currently not known whether the molecular tumor subtype is maintained after distant spread. If this is the case, molecular subtyping of the primary tumor could guide subtype-targeted therapy of metastatic disease. In this study, we classified paired samples of primary colorectal carcinomas and their corresponding liver metastases (n=129) as epithelial-like or mesenchymal-like, using a recently developed immunohistochemistry-based classification tool. We observed considerable discordance (45%) in the classification of primary tumors and their liver metastases. Discordant classification was significantly associated with the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Furthermore, gene expression analysis of chemotherapy-exposed versus chemotherapy naive liver metastases revealed expression of a mesenchymal program in pre-treated tumors. To explore whether chemotherapy could cause gene expression changes influencing molecular subtyping, we exposed patient-derived colonospheres to six short cycles of 5-fluorouracil. Gene expression profiling and signature enrichment analysis subsequently revealed that the expression of signatures identifying mesenchymal-like tumors was strongly increased in chemotherapy-exposed tumor cultures. Unsupervised clustering of large cohorts of human colon tumors with the chemotherapy-induced gene expression program identified a poor prognosis mesenchymal-like subgroup. We conclude that neoadjuvant chemotherapy induces a mesenchymal phenotype in residual tumor cells and that this may influence the molecular classification of colorectal tumors.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading causes of cancerrelated mortality

  • Neoadjuvant therapy of primary colorectal tumors is associated with a mesenchymal tumor subtype Paraffin-embedded tissue samples of the resection specimens of paired primary colorectal tumors and corresponding liver metastases were available of 129 patients, and were assembled into a tissue microarray

  • More than half of the Discordant molecular classification of primary colorectal tumors and their corresponding liver metastases is associated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy

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Summary

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy affects molecular classification of colorectal tumors

K Trumpi, I Ubink, A Trinh, M Djafarihamedani, JM Jongen, KM Govaert, SG Elias, SR van Hooff, JP Medema, MM Lacle, L Vermeulen, IHM Borel Rinkes and O Kranenburg. The recent discovery of ‘molecular subtypes’ in human primary colorectal cancer has revealed correlations between subtype, propensity to metastasize and response to therapy. It is currently not known whether the molecular tumor subtype is maintained after distant spread. Gene expression analysis of chemotherapy-exposed versus chemotherapy naive liver metastases revealed expression of a mesenchymal program in pre-treated tumors. Gene expression profiling and signature enrichment analysis subsequently revealed that the expression of signatures identifying mesenchymal-like tumors was strongly increased in chemotherapy-exposed tumor cultures. We conclude that neoadjuvant chemotherapy induces a mesenchymal phenotype in residual tumor cells and that this may influence the molecular classification of colorectal tumors. Oncogenesis (2017) 6, e357; doi:10.1038/oncsis.2017.48; published online 10 July 2017

INTRODUCTION
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Adjuvant chemotherapy
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