Abstract

BackgroundGastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are the most frequent mesenchymal tumors to develop in the digestive tract. These tumors are highly resistant to conventional chemotherapy and only the introduction of imatinib mesylate has improved the prognosis of patients. However, Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors are inappropriate for assessing tumor response, and the histological/pathological response to imatinib is variable, heterogeneous, and does not associate with clinical response. The effects of imatinib on responding GISTs are still being explored, and few studies correlate the clinical response with the histological response after pharmacological treatment. Recently, apoptosis and autophagy were suggested as possible alternative mechanisms of pharmacological response.MethodsHere, we used a proteomic approach, combined with other analyses, to identify some molecular stromal components related to the response/behavior of resected, high-risk GISTs after neoadiuvant imatinib therapy.ResultsOur proteomic results indicate an elevated concentration of Stem Cell Growth Factor (SCGF), a hematopoietic growth factor having a role in the development of erythroid and myeloid progenitors, in imatinib-responsive tumor areas. SCGFα expression was detected by mass spectrometry, immunohistochemistry and/or western blot and attributed to acellular matrix of areas scored negative for KIT (CD117). RT-PCR results indicated that GIST samples did not express SCGF transcripts. The recently reported demonstration by Gundacker et al. [1] of the secretion of SCGF in mature pro-inflammatory dendritic cells would indicate a potential importance of SCGF in tissue inflammatory response. Accordingly, inflammatory infiltrates were detected in imatinib-affected areas and the CD68-positivity of the SCGF-positive and KIT-negative areas suggested previous infiltration of monocytes/macrophages into these regions. Thus, chronic inflammation subsequent to imatinib treatment may determine monocyte/macrophage recruitment in imatinib-damaged areas; these areas also feature prominent tumor-cell loss that is replaced by dense hyalinization and fibrosis.ConclusionsOur studies highlight a possible role of SCGFα in imatinib-induced changes of GIST structure, consistent with a therapeutic response.

Highlights

  • Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are the most frequent mesenchymal tumors to develop in the digestive tract

  • To explore the protein expression pattern of GIST samples treated with imatinib mesylate, protein extracts from five GISTs were loaded onto one-dimensional SDS-PAGE and visualized by Coomassie staining

  • These five samples consisted of one untreated tumor (GIST 1), three tumors from high-responder patients (GISTs 3-5), and one tumor (GIST 2) from a patient with clinically stable disease but who was scored as a non-responder (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are the most frequent mesenchymal tumors to develop in the digestive tract These tumors are highly resistant to conventional chemotherapy and only the introduction of imatinib mesylate has improved the prognosis of patients. They typically arise from the stomach (40-70%) or small intestine (20-40%) but can occur in the colonrectum (10-15%) and rarely in the esophagus. GISTs are highly resistant to conventional chemotherapy [12]; in the past decade, the introduction of imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®, Novartis Pharmaceutical Corporation, NJ, USA), a KIT receptor blocker, has significantly improved the prognosis of GIST patients. The major problem with imatinib treatment is resistance, mainly secondary resistance that generally evolves in most patients after a median of two years of therapy [13,14]

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