| Literature DB >> 25986923 |
Abhisek Mitra1, Lopa Mishra2, Shulin Li1.
Abstract
Tumor relapse and metastasis are the primary causes of poor survival rates in patients with advanced cancer despite successful resection or chemotherapeutic treatment. A primary cause of relapse and metastasis is the persistence of cancer stem cells (CSCs), which are highly resistant to chemotherapy. Although highly efficacious drugs suppressing several subpopulations of CSCs in various tissue-specific cancers are available, recurrence is still common in patients. To find more suitable therapy for relapse, the mechanisms underlying metastasis and drug-resistance associated with relapse-initiating CSCs need to be identified. Recent studies in circulating tumor cells (CTCs) of some cancer patients manifest phenotypes of both CSCs and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). These patients are unresponsive to standard chemotherapies and have low progression free survival, suggesting that EMT-positive CTCs are related to co-occur with or transform into relapse-initiating CSCs. Furthermore, EMT programming in cancer cells enables in the remodeling of extracellular matrix to break the dormancy of relapse-initiating CSCs. In this review, we extensively discuss the association of the EMT program with CTCs and CSCs to characterize a subpopulation of patients prone to relapses. Identifying the mechanisms by which EMT-transformed CTCs and CSCs initiate relapse could facilitate the development of new or enhanced personalized therapeutic regimens.Entities:
Keywords: CSCs; CTCs; EMT; clinical trials; tumor relapse
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25986923 PMCID: PMC4484413 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Tissue-specific tumor recurrence rates and 5-year survival rates in patients with cancer
| Tumor sites | Recurrence rate | 5 years survival rate | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bladder | ~40-70% | ~15-98% | [ |
| Bone | ~50% | ~60-80% | [ |
| Breast | ~15-20% | ~90-20% | [ |
| Brain | ~85% | ~10% | [ |
| Colon | ~18-32% | ~6-74% | [ |
| Head and Neck | ~24-33% | ~50-66% | [ |
| Kidney | ~20-40% | ~8-81% | [ |
| Liver | ~70% | ~25-50% | [ |
| Lung | ~10-24% | ~40-60% | [ |
| Ovary | ~20-50% | ~18-89% | [ |
| Pancreatic | ~80% | ~5-14% | [ |
| Prostate | ~30-44% | ~99-100% | [ |
| Testis | ~4-14% | ~74-99% | [ |
| Thyroid | ~5-10% | ~51-100% | [ |
| Uterus | ~14-25% | ~17-95% | [ |
Figure 1Tumor relapse driven by EMT-positive CTCs and CSCs
Upon anti-cancer therapy of primary tumors, EMT-positive CTCs are detected in large numbers in the peripheral blood. These CTCs migrate through organs such as the liver, lungs, lymph nodes, and bone marrow. Once the tumor cells arrive at their site of relapse, they remain dormant for an extended period and transform into CSCs. ECM remodeling; p38α, NR2F1, and TGFβ2 signaling; and inhibition of ERK1/2, FAK, FOXM1, and c-JUN pathways facilitate dormancy. Furthermore, tumor-associated tissue environments provide an embedded niche to protect these cells from anti-cancer therapies or any other lethal damage. Under ambient conditions, with ECM remodeling and activation of proliferative, angiogenic signaling pathways, EMT-positive CSCs undergo proliferation to initiate recurrence. These cells are highly resistant to anti-cancer drugs and are capable of evading immune surveillance.
Figure 2Understanding the dynamic equilibrium between EMT positive CTCs and CSCs to define tumor relapse
Periodic chemo- or radiotherapy on primary tumor induces EMT positive tumor cells. These EMT positive tumor cells are transformed into quiescent CTCs upon entering into the bloodstream. These EMT positive CTCs express Plastin 3 (PLS3) and cell surface Vimentin (CSV) on its surface. During relapse phase, EMT positive CTCs reprogram into drug-resistant EMT positive CSCs under ambient condition to cause poor survival rate for cancer patients.
Prognostic significance of CTC counts in phase II and III clinical trials in cancers of various tissues
| Tumor Tissue | CTC detection rate | Phase of Trial | Prognostic relevance | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | 91% (n = 41 of 45) | II | 42.9% of patients had 12 months of survival with CTCs (≥1). | [ |
| Breast | 11.2%(n = 51 of 455) | III | Not applicable. | [ |
| Breast | 39% (n = 148 of 378) | II | 75% of trastuzumab-treated group showed CK19-negative CTCs. | [ |
| Colon | 37.5% (n = 180 of 480) | III | 41% of CTC-positive (≥5) patients had 24 months survival. | [ |
| Lung | 44.4% (n = 8 of 18) | II | 76.5% patients showed favorable CTC counts. | [ |
| Lung | 78% (n = 32 of 41) | II | 18% of patients with ≥5 CTCs converted to favorable CTCs (<5). | [ |
| Ovary | 32.1% (n = 216 of 672) | III | CTC count was not correlated with survival. | [ |
| Prostate | 66% (n = 263 of 400) | III | Median progression-free survival times, 25.1 months (<3 CTCs) and 16.2 months (≥3 CTCs). | [ |
| Prostate | 71.5% (n = 88 of 123) | I/II | 47% of patients with ≥2 positive and 28% of patients with <2 CTC biomarkers showed distant relapse. | [ |
| Prostate | 35.4% (n = 11 of 31) | II | Overall survival rate for 36 months was positive for 55% of patients with 1 positive and 42% of patients with 2-3 positive CTC biomarkers. | [ |
| Pancreas | 37.5% (n = 19 of 51) | II | Median overall survival times, 17.4 to 25.3 months (<2 CTCs) and 12.4 months (≥2 CTCs). | [ |
| Skin | ~13-17.5% (n = 44-56 of 320) | III | Unable to correlate with disease characteristics owing to low CTC counts. | [ |
| Skin | 86% (n = 214 of 269) | III | Increased progression-free survival with decreased CTC counts. | [ |
Novel therapeutic compounds targeting CSCs in various tissue-specific cancers
ATRA, all-trans retinoic acid; AML, acute myelogenous leukemia; CML, chronic myelognous leukemia; MM, multiple myeloma.
| Tissue stem cells | Drug | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | ATRA | No | Mammosphere | [ |
| Breast | IMD-0354+ Doxorubicin | Yes | Sphere | [ |
| Breast | Salinomycin | Yes | Mammosphere | [ |
| Brain | Disulfiram | No | Ubiquitin-proteasomal pathway | [ |
| Brain | γ-secretase inhibitor | Yes | Notch pathway | [ |
| Blood (AML) | ABT-263 | Yes | Oxidative phosphorylation | [ |
| Blood (CML) | FTY720 | Yes | PP2A agonist | [ |
| Blood (MM) | Palcitaxel-Fe3O4 | Yes | Not tested | [ |
| Colon | Metformin + FuOx | No | Colonosphere | [ |
| Colon | CC188 | No | Carbohydrate | [ |
| Colon | α-DLL4 | Yes | Not tested | [ |
| Gallbladder | Emodin | Yes | ABCG2 pump | [ |
| Liver | Lupeol | Yes | Hepatosphere | [ |
| Lung, Breast and | VS-5584 | No | PI3K-mTOR | [ |
| Pancreas | GDC-0449 | No | Hedgehog pathway | [ |
| Pancreas | GNT-61 | Yes | Hedgehog pathway | [ |