Maley Carlo C, Galipeau Patricia C, Li Xiaohong, Sanchez Carissa A, Paulson Thomas G, Blount Patricia L, Reid Brian J
Division of Human Biology, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Cancer Res. 2004 Oct 15;64(20):7629-33. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-04-1738.
There is debate in the literature over the relative importance of genetic instability and clonal expansion during progression to cancer. Barrett's esophagus is a uniquely suited model to investigate neoplastic progression prospectively because periodic endoscopic biopsy surveillance is recommended for early detection of esophageal adenocarcinoma. We hypothesized that expansion of clones with genetic instability would predict progression to esophageal adenocarcinoma. We measured p16 (CDKN2A/INK4A) lesions (loss of heterozygosity, mutations, and CpG island methylation), p53 (TP53) lesions (loss of heterozygosity, mutation) and ploidy abnormalities (aneuploidy, tetraploidy) within each Barrett's esophagus segment of a cohort of 267 research participants, who were followed prospectively with cancer as an outcome. We defined the size of a lesion as the fraction of cells with the lesion multiplied by the length of the Barrett's esophagus segment. A Cox proportional hazards regression indicates that the sizes of clones with p53 loss of heterozygosity (relative risk = 1.27(x) for an x cm clone; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-1.50) or ploidy abnormalities (relative risk = 1.31(x) for an x cm clone; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-1.60) predict progression to esophageal adenocarcinoma better than the mere presence of such clones (likelihood ratio test, P < 0.01). Controlling for length of the Barrett's esophagus segment had little effect. The size of a clone with a p16 lesion is not a significant predictor of esophageal adenocarcinoma when we controlled for p53 loss of heterozygosity status. The combination of clonal expansion and genetic instability is a better predictor of cancer outcome than either alone. This implies that interventions that limit expansion of genetically unstable clones may reduce risk of progression to cancer.
关于基因不稳定性和克隆性扩增在癌症进展过程中的相对重要性,文献中存在争议。巴雷特食管是一种特别适合前瞻性研究肿瘤进展的模型,因为建议进行定期内镜活检监测以早期发现食管腺癌。我们假设具有基因不稳定性的克隆扩增可预测食管腺癌的进展。我们在267名研究参与者队列的每个巴雷特食管段中测量了p16(CDKN2A/INK4A)病变(杂合性缺失、突变和CpG岛甲基化)、p53(TP53)病变(杂合性缺失、突变)和倍体异常(非整倍体、四倍体),这些参与者接受了以癌症为结局的前瞻性随访。我们将病变大小定义为具有该病变的细胞比例乘以巴雷特食管段的长度。Cox比例风险回归表明,具有p53杂合性缺失的克隆大小(x厘米克隆的相对风险=1.27(x);95%置信区间,1.07 - 1.50)或倍体异常(x厘米克隆的相对风险=1.31(x);95%置信区间,1.07 - 1.60)比仅存在此类克隆能更好地预测食管腺癌的进展(似然比检验,P < 0.01)。控制巴雷特食管段的长度影响不大。当我们控制p53杂合性缺失状态时,具有p16病变的克隆大小不是食管腺癌的显著预测指标。克隆性扩增和基因不稳定性的组合比单独任何一个因素都能更好地预测癌症结局。这意味着限制基因不稳定克隆扩增的干预措施可能会降低进展为癌症的风险。