| Literature DB >> 26510912 |
Vivek Subbiah1, Michael J Wagner1, Mary F McGuire2, Nawid M Sarwari3, Eswaran Devarajan4, Valerae O Lewis4, Shanon Westin5, Shumei Kato1, Robert E Brown2, Pete Anderson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite advances in molecular medicine over recent decades, there has been little advancement in the treatment of osteosarcoma. We performed comprehensive molecular profiling in two cases of metastatic and chemotherapy-refractory osteosarcoma to guide molecularly targeted therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Hybridization capture of >300 cancer-related genes plus introns from 28 genes often rearranged or altered in cancer was applied to >50 ng of DNA extracted from tumor samples from two patients with recurrent, metastatic osteosarcoma. The DNA from each sample was sequenced to high, uniform coverage. Immunohistochemical probes and morphoproteomics analysis were performed, in addition to fluorescence in situ hybridization. All analyses were performed in CLIA-certified laboratories. Molecularly targeted therapy based on the resulting profiles was offered to the patients. Biomedical analytics were performed using QIAGEN's Ingenuity® Pathway Analysis.Entities:
Keywords: molecular profiling; osteosarcoma; personalized medicine; precision medicine; targeted therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26510912 PMCID: PMC4747358 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.5841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Histopathology figure of osteosarcoma from patient # 1
Summary of molecular aberrations in genes, receptors, and pathways by various CLIA-certified methods for osteosarcoma Patient #1 and their targeted agents
| Detection Method/Therapy | Oncogenic pathway for potential targeted therapy | Chemosensitivity markers | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mTOR therapy or P13K | MEK inhibitor | Crizotinib | STAT 3 inhibitor/IGF1R inhibitor | Abraxane | Taxane | |
Complete molecular profiling analysis by various CLIA-certified methods for osteosarcoma Patient #1
| Marker | Result | Details | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Topoisomerase II alpha | Positive | ~70–90% of tumor nuclei (higher percentage of nuclear expression in cellular foci and less in chondroid regions); 26 mitotic figures/10 hpf in cellular regions | Facilitates S to G2 and M phase transitions |
| Bcl-2 | Positive | 2+ in cytoplasm of tumor cells | Anti-apoptotic protein |
| Fatty acid synthase (FASN) | Positive | Highly expressed in cytoplasm (up to 3+) | Tumorigenic protein; correlates with propensity for pulmonary metastasis [ |
| P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) | Positive | Expressed to varying degrees in tumor nuclei | Chemoresistance factor; phosphorylated on threonine180/tyrosine182 |
| Excision repair cross complementation group1 (ERCC1) | Positive | Expressed to varying degrees in tumor nuclei | Chemoresistance factor; downstream effector of MAPK |
| Sirt1 (silent mating type information regulator 2 homolog), NAD+histone deacetylase | Positive | Expressed in 2–3+ in majority of tumor nuclei | Associated with upregulation in response to chemotherapy, mechanism of cancer resistance in human osteosarcoma [ |
| Nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB | Positive | 0–1/1+, nuclear/cytoplasm | Prosurvival protein, constitutively activated by virtue of expression with nuclear translocation of p-NF-kappaBp65(Ser536) |
| Signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT)-3 | Positive | 0–3+ (majority positive), nuclear | Activated with nuclear expression of p-STAT3(Tyr705) [ |
| Cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 | Positive | 1–3+, cytoplasm | Correlates inversely with survival in patients with osteosarcoma and lung metastasis; highly expressed in cytoplasm of tumor cells, especially more cellular regions [ |
| WNT/B-catenin signaling pathway. | Positive | Strong cytoplasmic and nuclear (up to 3+) expression in minor component of tumor cells (cellular foci) | Coincides with nuclear expression of c-Myc protein, whose expression can be upregulated by WNT/B-catenin signaling in ~1/3 of tumor cells [ |
| Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1 alpha | Present | 2+ cytoplasmic compartment, without apparent nuclear translocation | Hypoxia-associated protein analyte |
| HIF-2 alpha, VEGF-A | Present | 0–1+ in cytoplasmic compartment | Ischemic-type coagulative necrosis not apparent in the biopsy specimen |
| Nestin | Present | Strong expression; up to 3+; cytoplasmic aspect | High expression level in osteosarcoma predicted a worse clinical outcome in one study [ |
| CD44 | Present | Cytoplasmic/plasmalemmal aspect of tumor cells | |
| Glioma-associated oncogene protein (Gli2) | Present | Variable expression (0–3+) in majority of nuclei | Reflection of either sonic hedgehog pathway signaling or TGF-beta [Smad3] activation of Gli2 [ |
| Secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC; osteonectin) | Present | Up to 3+ cytoplasmic expression | Predicts poorer relapse and event-free survival rates as well as therapeutic option [ |
Figure 2Immunohistochemistry based morphoproteomic studies of osteosarcoma Patient #1
In the tumor cells of Patient #1, c-Met was expressed at 0–1+ (rarely 2+) in the cytoplasm, mTOR at 3+ in nucleus and cytoplasm, ERK 1/2 at 3+ in the nucleus, and Akt at 0–3+ in both nucleus and cytoplasm. Representative sections are shown.
Figure 3Complex molecular signaling network for osteosarcoma Patient #1
The patient's molecular profiling results were subjected to Ingenuity® Pathway Analysis to identify therapeutic targets. ORANGE: only in disease. PINK: measured analytes (lighter color is lower score). YELLOW: Drugs. DARK BLUE lines: drug interactions.