Morgell Ann, Reisz Julie A, Ateeb Zeeshan, Davanian Haleh, Reinsbach Susanne E, Halimi Asif, Gaiser Rogier, Valente Roberto, Arnelo Urban, Chiaro Marco Del, Sällberg Chen Margaret, D'Alessandro Angelo
medRxiv. 2020 Nov 4:2020.11.03.20225524. doi: 10.1101/2020.11.03.20225524.
Pancreatic cancer is the seventh leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide, with a 5-year survival rate as low as 9%. One factor complicating the management of pancreatic cancer is the lack of reliable tools for early diagnosis. While up to 50% of the adult population has been shown to develop precancerous pancreatic cysts, limited and insufficient approaches are currently available to determine whether a cyst is going to progress into pancreatic cancer. Recently, we used metabolomics approaches to identify candidate markers of disease progression in patients diagnosed with intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) undergoing pancreatic resection. Here we enrolled an independent cohort to verify the candidate markers from our previous study with orthogonal quantitative methods in plasma and cyst fluid from serous cystic neoplasm and IPMN (either low- or high-grade dysplasia or pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma). We thus validated these markers with absolute quantitative methods through the auxilium of stable isotope-labelled internal standards in a new independent cohort. Finally, we identified novel markers of IPMN status and disease progression - including amino acids, carboxylic acids, conjugated bile acids, free and carnitine-conjugated fatty acids, purine oxidation products and TMAO. We show that the levels of these metabolites of potential bacterial origin correlated with the degree of bacterial enrichment in the cyst, as determined by 16S RNA. Overall, our findings are interesting per se, owing to the validation of previous markers and identification of novel small molecule signatures of IPMN and disease progression. In addition, our findings further fuel the provoking debate as to whether bacterial infections may represent an etiological contributor to the development and severity of the disease in pancreatic cancer, in like fashion to other cancers (e.g., and gastric cancer).
We identified and quantified novel markers of IPMN cyst status and pancreatic cancer disease progression - including amino acids, carboxylic acids, conjugated bile acids, free and carnitine-conjugated fatty acids, purine oxidation products and TMAO.We show that the levels of these metabolites of potential bacterial origin correlated with the degree of bacterial enrichment in the cyst, as determined by 16S RNA.
胰腺癌是全球癌症相关死亡的第七大主要原因,5年生存率低至9%。胰腺癌管理的一个复杂因素是缺乏可靠的早期诊断工具。虽然高达50%的成年人口已被证明会发生癌前胰腺囊肿,但目前用于确定囊肿是否会进展为胰腺癌的方法有限且不足。最近,我们使用代谢组学方法来识别接受胰腺切除术的导管内乳头状黏液性肿瘤(IPMN)患者疾病进展的候选标志物。在此,我们招募了一个独立队列,用正交定量方法在浆液性囊性肿瘤和IPMN(低级别或高级别发育异常或胰腺导管腺癌)的血浆和囊液中验证我们先前研究中的候选标志物。因此,我们通过稳定同位素标记内标的辅助,用绝对定量方法在一个新的独立队列中验证了这些标志物。最后,我们确定了IPMN状态和疾病进展的新标志物——包括氨基酸、羧酸、结合胆汁酸、游离和肉碱结合脂肪酸、嘌呤氧化产物和氧化三甲胺。我们发现,这些潜在细菌来源的代谢物水平与通过16S RNA测定的囊肿中细菌富集程度相关。总体而言,由于对先前标志物的验证以及对IPMN和疾病进展新小分子特征的识别,我们的发现本身就很有趣。此外,我们的发现进一步引发了关于细菌感染是否可能像其他癌症(如结直肠癌和胃癌)一样是胰腺癌疾病发生和严重程度的病因学因素的激烈争论。
我们确定并量化了IPMN囊肿状态和胰腺癌疾病进展的新标志物——包括氨基酸、羧酸、结合胆汁酸、游离和肉碱结合脂肪酸、嘌呤氧化产物和氧化三甲胺。我们发现,这些潜在细菌来源的代谢物水平与通过16S RNA测定的囊肿中细菌富集程度相关。