| Literature DB >> 24064971 |
L Lima1, P F Severino, M Silva, A Miranda, A Tavares, S Pereira, E Fernandes, R Cruz, T Amaro, C A Reis, F Dall'Olio, F Amado, P A Videira, L Santos, J A Ferreira.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High risk of recurrence/progression bladder tumours is treated with Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) immunotherapy after complete resection of the tumour. Approximately 75% of these tumours express the uncommon carbohydrate antigen sialyl-Tn (Tn), a surrogate biomarker of tumour aggressiveness. Such changes in the glycosylation of cell-surface proteins influence tumour microenvironment and immune responses that may modulate treatment outcome and the course of disease. The aim of this work is to determine the efficiency of BCG immunotherapy against tumours expressing sTn and sTn-related antigen sialyl-6-T (s6T).Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24064971 PMCID: PMC3798967 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2013.571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Expression of sTn and s6T in bladder tumours. Schematic representation of a bladder tumour expressing sTn and s6T antigens (A). Urothelial cell-surface glycoproteins present more or less elongated O-glycan chains often terminated with ABO and/or Lewis blood group determinants (not represented). Conversely, some malignant cells express the sTn and s6T (STn+Gal residue) antigens that result from a premature stop in the biosynthesis of O-glycans (A). The sTn, but not the s6T antigen, can be recognised by mouse monoclonal antibody TKH2 (A1). The digestion of the FFPE sections with a β-(1-3)-galactosidase removes the Gal residue from s6T allowing detection by TKH2 (A2). Bladder tumour expressing the sTn antigen (B). Bladder tumour expressing the s6T antigen but not sTn (C). The FFPE tissue was positive for sTn only after digestion of the FFPE tissue with a β-(1-3)-galactosidase. This is the first report on s6T antigen expression in bladder tumours.
Relation between patients clinical and tumour characteristics and response to BCG treatment and time to recurrence
| <65 | 51 (54.3) | 37 (63.8) | 14 (38.9) | 1.0 | ||
| ⩾65 | 43 (45.7) | 21 (36.2) | 22 (61.1) | | 2.668 (1.355–5.254) | |
| Male | 78 (83.0) | 47 (81.0) | 31 (86.1) | 0.524 | 1.0 | |
| Female | 16 (17.0) | 11 (19.0) | 5 (13.9) | | 0.883 (0.342–2.283) | 0.798 |
| Ta | 40 (42.6) | 23 (39.7) | 17 (47.2) | 0.471 | 1.0 | |
| T1 | 54 (57.4) | 35 (60.3) | 19 (52.8) | | 0.838 (0.435–1.613) | 0.596 |
| Low | 38 (40.4) | 24 (41.4) | 14 (38.9) | 0.843 | 1.0 | |
| High | 56 (59.6) | 34 (58.6) | 22 (61.1) | | 1.295 (0.661–2.537) | 0.450 |
| <3 | 62 (66.7) | 38 (65.5) | 24 (68.6) | 0.762 | 1.0 | |
| ⩾3 | 31(33.3) | 20 (34.5) | 11 (31.4) | | 0.787 (0.384–1.613) | 0.513 |
| Unifocal | 51 (54.3) | 30 (51.7) | 13 (36.1) | 0.140 | 1.0 | |
| Multifocal | 43 (45.7) | 28 (48.3) | 23 (63.9) | | 2.065 (1.033–4.126) | |
| No | 88 (93.6) | 54 (93.1) | 34 (94.4) | 1.000 | 1.0 | |
| Yes | 6 (6.4) | 4 (6.9) | 2 (5.6) | | 0.783 (0.188–3.267) | 0.737 |
| Primary | 48 (51.0) | 31 (53.4) | 17 (47.2) | 0.557 | 1.0 | |
| Recurrent | 46 (49) | 27 (46.6) | 19 (52.8) | | 1.327 (0.686–2.564) | 0.401 |
| iBCG | 41 (43.6) | 20 (34.5) | 21 (58.3) | 1.0 | ||
| mBCG | 53 (56.4) | 38 (65.5) | 15 (41.7) | 0480 (0.246–0.936) | ||
Abbreviations: BCG=Bacillus Calmette-Guérin; CI=confidence interval; CIS=Carcinoma in situ; HR=hazard ratio; iBCG= induction BCG; mBCG=maintenance BCG.Bold values indicate P<0.05.
Chi-square test.
Wald test.
Association between sTn and s6T antigens and clinicopathological characteristics
| <65 | 21 (65.6) | 30 (48.4) | 0.112 | 13 (59.1) | 38 (52.8) | 0.603 |
| ⩾65 | 11 (34.4) | 32 (51.6) | | 9 (40.9) | 34 (47.2) | |
| Male | 27 (84.4) | 51 (86.1) | 0.796 | 17 (77.3) | 61 (84.7) | 0.517 |
| Female | 5 (15.6) | 11 (17.7) | | 5 (22.7) | 11 (15.3) | |
| Ta | 16 (50.0) | 24 (38.7) | 0.294 | 10 (45.5) | 30 (41.7) | 0.753 |
| T1 | 16 (50.0) | 38 (61.3) | | 12 (54.5) | 42 (58.3) | |
| Low | 19 (59.4) | 19 (30.6) | 13 (59.1) | 25 (34.7) | ||
| High | 13 (40.6) | 43 (69.4) | | 9 (40.9) | 47 (65.3) | |
| <3 | 23 (74.2) | 39 (62.9) | 0.276 | 16 (76.2) | 46 (63.9) | 0.431 |
| ⩾3 | 8 (25.8) | 23 (37.1) | | 5 (23.8) | 26 (36.1) | |
| Unifocal | 12 (37.5) | 13 (50.0) | 0.249 | 7 (31.8) | 36 (50.0) | 0.134 |
| Multifocal | 20 (62.5) | 31 (50.0) | | 15 (68.2) | 36 (50.0) | |
| No | 29 (90.6) | 59 (95.2) | 0.406 | 19 (86.4) | 69 (95.4) | 0.112 |
| Yes | 3 (9.4) | 3 (4.8) | | 3 (13.6) | 3 (4.2) | |
| Primary | 9 (28.1) | 39 (62.9) | 7 (31.8) | 41 (56.9) | ||
| Recurrent | 23 (71.9) | 19 (37.1) | | 15 (68.2) | 31 (43.1) | |
| iBCG | 14 (43.8) | 27 (43.5) | 0.985 | 11 (50.0) | 30 (41.7) | 0.490 |
| mBCG | 18 (56.2) | 35 (56.5) | 11 (50.0) | 42 (58.3) | ||
Abbreviations: BCG=Bacillus Calmette-Guérin; iBCG= induction BCG; CIS=Carcinoma in situ; mBCG=maintenance BCG.Bold values indicate P<0.05.
Chi-square test.
STn and sTn/s6T frequencies and risk of recurrence after BCG therapy
| Negative | 15 (25.9) | 17 (47.2) | |
| Positive | 43 (74.1) | 19 (52.8) | 0.034 |
| Negative | 6 (10.5) | 16 (43.2) | |
| Positive | 51 (89.5) | 21 (56.8) | 0.0001 |
Abbreviation: BCG=Bacillus Calmette-Guérin.
Chi-square test.
Figure 2Effect of sTn and s6T expression in recurrence-free survival (RFS). Kaplan–Meier analysis to evaluate the association between RFS in the studied patients and: (A) sTn expression; (B) STn plus s6T presence (sTn/S6T). Comparison performed by log-rank test (A: P=0.157; B: P=0.001); ± censored sTn or sTn/s6T-negative tumours; ♦ censored sTn or sTn/s6T-negative tumours.
Multivariate analysis and risk estimation of sTn and s6T influence on BCG therapy outcome
| Negative | 1.0 | Referent | |
| Positive | 0544 | 0275–1.076 | 0.080 |
| Negative | 1.0 | Referent | |
| Positive | 0296 | 0148–0.594 | 0.001 |
Abbreviations: BCG=Bacillus Calmette-Guérin; CI=confidence interval; HR=hazard ratio.
Adjusted for age, tumour number and BCG schedule.
Figure 3BCG internalisation by bladder cancer cell lines over time. (A) Internalisation of fluorescent-labelled BCG by mock-transduced MCRnc cells (light grey bars) and by ST6GalNAc.I-transduced MCRsTn+ cells (dark grey bars), after 2 or 6 h of exposure with BCG. An obvious time-dependent internalisation was observed, and a tendency for higher fluorescent-labelled BCG internalisation rates was observed by MCRsTn+ cells. Data are the average of three independent experiments (mean fluorescence intensity). (B) A representative flow cytometry dot plots of MCRsTn+ cells before (light grey dots) and after 6 h (dark grey dots) of fluorescent-labelled BCG exposure. Horizontal and transversal double sense arrows represent the MFI shift observed after 6 h of BCG internalisation.
Figure 4Effect of BCG in the viability of bladder cancer cell lines expressing sTn. (A) The apoptotic status of MCR cell lines was evaluated after 6 h exposure to BCG, by Annexin V staining and flow cytometry analysis. Flow cytometry histograms show MCRnc and MCRsTn+ cells labelled with Annexin V before (light grey histograms) and after 6 h of BCG treatment (dark grey and open histograms, respectively). MCRsTn+ cells showed higher Annexin V labelling (MFIMCRnc=2560 to MFIMCRsTn+=2640—horizontal arrow) and a higher percentage of cells with strong Annexin V labelling (4% to 7%—vertical arrow). (B) Analysis of size and granularity of cells exposed 24 h to BCG. Dot plot analysis of BCG-treated MCRsTn+ revealed a marked decrease of both side-angle light scatter (SSc) and forward-angle light scatter (FSc) signals, which is consistent with massive cell death. By contrast, BCG treatment resulted in little changes of the dot plot pattern of MCRnc cells. Data are from one representative assay out of three independent experiments.