Department of Pathology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2010 Nov 3;5(11):e13821. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013821.
Fifty percent of patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MI-BC) die from their disease and current chemotherapy treatment only marginally increases survival. Novel therapies targeting receptor tyrosine kinases or activated oncogenes may improve outcome. Hence, it is necessary to stratify patients based on mutations in relevant oncogenes. Patients with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMI-BC) have excellent survival, however two-thirds develop recurrences. Tumor specific mutations can be used to detect recurrences in urine assays, presenting a more patient-friendly diagnostic procedure than cystoscopy.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To address these issues, we developed a mutation assay for the simultaneous detection of 19 possible mutations in the HRAS, KRAS, and NRAS genes. With this assay and mutation assays for the FGFR3 and PIK3CA oncogenes, we screened primary bladder tumors of 257 patients and 184 recurrences from 54 patients. Additionally, in primary tumors p53 expression was obtained by immunohistochemistry. Of primary tumors 64% were mutant for FGFR3, 11% for RAS, 24% for PIK3CA, and 26% for p53. FGFR3 mutations were mutually exclusive with RAS mutations (p = 0.001) and co-occurred with PIK3CA mutations (p = 0.016). P53 overexpression was mutually exclusive with PIK3CA and FGFR3 mutations (p≤0.029). Mutations in the RAS and PIK3CA genes were not predictors for recurrence-free, progression-free and disease-specific survival. In patients presenting with NMI-BC grade 3 and MI-BC, 33 and 36% of the primary tumors were mutant. In patients with low-grade NMI-BC, 88% of the primary tumors carried a mutation and 88% of the recurrences were mutant.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The mutation assays present a companion diagnostic to define patients for targeted therapies. In addition, the assays are a potential biomarker to detect recurrences during surveillance. We showed that 88% of patients presenting with low-grade NMI-BC are eligible for such a follow-up. This may contribute to a reduction in the number of cystoscopical examinations.
50%的肌层浸润性膀胱癌(MI-BC)患者死于该疾病,而目前的化疗治疗仅略微提高了生存率。针对受体酪氨酸激酶或激活的癌基因的新型疗法可能会改善预后。因此,有必要根据相关癌基因的突变对患者进行分层。非肌层浸润性膀胱癌(NMI-BC)患者的生存率极好,但其中三分之二会复发。肿瘤特异性突变可用于尿液检测中检测复发,与膀胱镜检查相比,这是一种更适合患者的诊断程序。
方法/主要发现:为了解决这些问题,我们开发了一种用于同时检测 HRAS、KRAS 和 NRAS 基因中 19 种可能突变的突变检测。使用该检测以及 FGFR3 和 PIK3CA 癌基因的突变检测,我们筛查了 257 名患者的原发性膀胱癌和 54 名患者的 184 例复发。此外,我们通过免疫组织化学获得了原发性肿瘤中的 p53 表达。64%的原发性肿瘤 FGFR3 突变,11%的 RAS 突变,24%的 PIK3CA 突变,26%的 p53 突变。FGFR3 突变与 RAS 突变相互排斥(p=0.001),并与 PIK3CA 突变共存(p=0.016)。p53 过表达与 PIK3CA 和 FGFR3 突变相互排斥(p≤0.029)。RAS 和 PIK3CA 基因的突变不是无复发生存、无进展生存和疾病特异性生存的预测因素。在出现 NMI-BC 3 级和 MI-BC 的患者中,33%和 36%的原发性肿瘤发生突变。在低级别 NMI-BC 患者中,88%的原发性肿瘤携带突变,88%的复发发生突变。
结论/意义:突变检测为定义靶向治疗患者提供了伴随诊断。此外,这些检测可能是检测监测期间复发的潜在生物标志物。我们表明,88%的低级别 NMI-BC 患者适合进行这种随访。这可能有助于减少膀胱镜检查的数量。