| Literature DB >> 21114854 |
Shawn A Ritchie1, Doug Heath, Yasuyo Yamazaki, Bryan Grimmalt, Amir Kavianpour, Kevin Krenitsky, Hoda Elshoni, Ichiro Takemasa, Masakazu Miyake, Mitsugu Sekimoto, Morito Monden, Takeshi Tomonaga, Hisahiro Matsubara, Kazuyuki Sogawa, Kazuyuki Matsushita, Fumio Nomura, Dayan B Goodenowe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Serum levels of novel hydroxy polyunsaturated ultra long-chain fatty acids (hPULCFAs) have been previously shown to be reduced in pre-treatment CRC patients compared to disease-free subjects, independent of disease stage. However, whether reduced levels of hPULCFAs result from the presence of cancer is currently unknown, as is the distribution of hPULCFAs in the general population. The following studies were carried out to assess whether conventional therapy would result in restoration of systemic hPULCFAs in CRC patients, and to investigate the relationship between hPULCFA levels and age.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21114854 PMCID: PMC3009636 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-10-140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Summary of clinical populations.
| SDCL | Longitudinal 1 | Longitudinal 2 | North American | Osaka | Chiba | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | Controls | CRC | CRC | CRC1 | Control1 | CRC1 | Control1 | |
| 990 | 8 (110 samples) | 12 (94 samples) | 150 | 46 | 35 | 40 | 40 | |
| Caucasian | Caucasian | Caucasian | Caucasian | Japanese | Japanese | Japanese | Japanese | |
| | 214 | 6 | ||||||
| | 175 | 11 | ||||||
| | 189 | 33 | ||||||
| | 164 | 47 | ||||||
| | 133 | 34 | ||||||
| | 116 | 19 | ||||||
| 320 | 4 | 75 | 27 | na | 19 | 24 | ||
| 6-93 | 36-61 | 66 (33-91) | 63 (28-90) | na | 68 (45-91) | 48 (36-69) | ||
| 670 | 4 | 75 | 19 | na | 21 | 16 | ||
| 11-99 | 33-44 | 63 (31-89) | 65 (31-77) | na | 70 (51-84) | 49 (39-59) | ||
| 12 | 10 | 9 | ||||||
| 30 | 14 | 18 | ||||||
| 46 | 12 | 11 | ||||||
| 42 | 8 | 2 | ||||||
| 20 | 2 | 0 | ||||||
| 139 | 342 | 402 | ||||||
| | 76 | na | na | |||||
| | 31 | na | na | |||||
| | 37 | na | na | |||||
| 11 | na | na | ||||||
1Control and pre-treatment samples are the same ones reported in [11].
2Not previously reported.
3Therapy following surgery.
Figure 1CRC-446 levels in pre and post-surgery CRC patients. Mean levels of CRC-446 in controls, pre-surgery and post-surgery CRC patients as determined by triple-quadrupole tandem-MS for the Osaka (A) and Chiba (B) studies. Levels are reported as concentration equivalents (± 1 S.E.M in ug/ml), to the internal standard [13C1]cholic acid, (CAEs). p-values based on Student's t-test between pre- and post-surgery in both studies were >0.05. Note: Control and pre-surgery levels were also previously reported in [14].
Figure 2CRC-446 levels in controls and CRC patients. (A) ROC analysis based on CRC-446 concentrations across 150 Caucasian post-treatment CRC patients and 761 age-matched controls. Dotted lines represent the 95% confidence interval. Mean CRC-446 levels (± 1S.E.M) are shown by disease stage for the 150 CRC patients (B) and by treatment combination (C). p-values based on Student's t-test between all stages and between treatment comparisons were >0.05.
Regression analysis between CRC-446 levels and age
| Cohort | Multiple R | F | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| SDCL female controls | 0.26 | 48 | 8.4E-12 |
| SDCL male controls | 0.38 | 55 | 1.2E-12 |
| Bioserve CRC patients | 0.11 | 1.8 | 0.18 |
Figure 3CRC-446 levels in controls and CRC patients by age. (A) Mean CRC-446 levels (± 1 S.E.M.) by decade of life for the 990 controls (open squares) and for 150 CRC post-treatment patients (open circles). (B) Percent of subjects by age group falling into four CRC-446 quartiles centered around 50% of the under age 50 mean concentration of 0.18 ug/ml CAE.
Figure 4Longitudinal CRC-446 levels in controls. Levels of CRC-446 at multiple timepoints up to 90 weeks are shown for eight healthy asymptomatic subjects. The dotted lines represent the mean CRC-446 concentration in CRC-positive subjects of 0.15 ug/ml CAEs for reference.
Figure 5Longitudinal CRC-446 levels in stage IV metastatic CRC patients. Levels of CRC-446 at multiple timepoints up to 63 weeks are shown for 12 stage IV metastatic CRC patients enrolled in a clinical trial for an experimental cancer vaccine. The y-axes are scaled equivalently to Figure 4 for comparison and the dotted lines represent the mean CRC-446 concentration in CRC-positive subjects of 0.15 ug/ml CAEs for reference.
Figure 6Age-related CRC-446 positivity and CRC incidence rates. Percent of SDCL control subjects by decade of life with CRC-446 levels less than 0.23 ug/ml CAE (squares, primary y-axis). Linear regression analysis (based on the median age of each decade of life for the SDCL group) was used to determine the equation y = 0.65x-15.8, representing a .65% annual probability of a positive test result (concentration less than 0.23 ug/ml CAE) given a prior negative test (concentration greater than 0.23 ug/ml CAE). For comparison, the incidence rate of CRC as a percent of each age group (based on Canadian Cancer Statistics, 2009), is shown (circles, secondary axis).
Comparison of test positivity rates and recommended follow-up procedures based on CRC-446 (<0.23 ug/ml CAEs) and FIT.
| Age | Actual CRC-446 test positivity (% by decade) for SDCL controls (<0.23 ug/ml) | Actual Bioserve CRC positivity (% by decade using <0.23 ug/ml) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <50 | 12.3 | 10 | 88.2 | 10,000 | 0 | 250 | 220 | 132 |
| 50-59 | 21.7 | 6.5 | 81.8 | 6,500 | 50,000 | 695 | 569 | 417 |
| 60-69 | 26.8 | 6.5 | 78.7 | 6,500 | 50,000 | 1684 | 1326 | 1010 |
| 70-79 | 32.3 | 6.5 | 85.3 | 6,500 | 50,000 | 2824 | 2409 | 1694 |
| (Average) Total | ||||||||
1Based on equation y = 0.65x-15.8 fitted to SDCL control data per decade falling below CRC-446 levels of 0.23 ug/ml.
2First CRC-446 test positivity (adjusted to mean of age 30 to 50).
3Note that number of positive CRC-446 tests is independent of testing frequency. Values shown are for per decade cumulative risk and assume all CRC-446 positive subjects have colonoscopy.
4Based on performing one FIT test every two years with 10% positivity rate (assuming all FIT positive subjects have colonoscopy).
6Based on the probability of developing cancer by decade of life (2009 Canadian Cancer Stats).
7Based on reported Bioserve CRC decade-specific positivity rates.
8Based on an average sensitivity of 60% per decade.