Literature DB >> 27802454

Impact of SPARC expression on outcome in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer not receiving nab-paclitaxel: a pooled analysis from prospective clinical and translational trials.

Steffen Ormanns1, Michael Haas2, Sibylle Baechmann1,2, Annelore Altendorf-Hofmann3, Anna Remold1,2, Detlef Quietzsch4, Michael R Clemens5, Martin Bentz6, Michael Geissler7, Helmut Lambertz8, Stephan Kruger2, Thomas Kirchner1, Volker Heinemann2, Stefan Boeck2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Conflicting results on the role of secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteins (SPARC) expression have been reported in resected pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), and its prognostic and/or predictive role in advanced PDAC (aPDAC) has not been extensively investigated yet. This study was designed to evaluate SPARC expression as a biomarker in aPDAC patients (pts) not receiving nab-paclitaxel.
METHODS: Using immunohistochemistry, we examined the stromal as well as the tumoral (i.e., cytoplasmic) SPARC expression in tumour tissue (primary tumours and metastases) of 134 aPDAC pts participating in completed prospective clinical and biomarker trials. The SPARC expression levels were correlated to the pts' clinicopathological parameters and survival times.
RESULTS: Sixty-seven per cent of the analysed tumours showed high stromal SPARC expression, which was not associated with overall survival (OS, median 9.1 vs 7.6 months, P=0.316). A positive cytoplasmic SPARC expression was detected in 55% of the tumours and correlated significantly with inferior progression-free survival (PFS, 6.2 vs 8.6 months, P=0.004) and OS (7.8 vs 8.4 months, P=0.032). This association was strongest for pts, where primary tumour tissue was examined (PFS: 6.7 vs 10.8 months, P=0.004; OS: 7.9 vs 11.9 months, P=0.030), whereas no significant correlation was detected for pts, where only metastatic tissue was available (PFS: 5.8 vs 6.6 months, P=0.502; OS: 7.0 vs 7.8 months, P=0.452). In pts receiving gemcitabine-based chemotherapy cytoplasmic SPARC expression was significantly associated with an inferior PFS and OS (PFS: 6.2 vs 9.2 months, P=0.002; OS 7.3 vs 9.9 months, P=0.012), whereas no such association was detected for stromal SPARC expression or for pts receiving fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy.
CONCLUSION: We identified cytoplasmic SPARC expression in the primary tumour as a biomarker associated with inferior PFS and OS in aPDAC. Cytoplasmic SPARC expression may furthermore act as a negative predictive biomarker in pts treated with gemcitabine-based chemotherapy.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27802454      PMCID: PMC5155356          DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2016.355

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


Despite extensive efforts in basic and clinical research in the last decades, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is still a devastating disease, with mortality rates almost equal to incidence rates (Malvezzi ). About 80% of PDAC patients (pts) are diagnosed in inoperable, often metastatic stages of disease with palliative chemotherapy being the only remaining therapeutic option (Heinemann ). In addition, the overall PDAC incidence rates are rising in western societies (Rahib ), which furthermore stresses the need for an intensified search for effective therapies as well as prognostic and predictive biomarkers—as these are still lacking, especially in advanced, that is metastatic disease (Kruger ). PDAC often displays a dense desmoplastic stroma, which has been associated with chemoresistance (Von Hoff ; Sinn ) as it has been shown to inhibit drug penetration as a physical barrier and due to high tissue pressures (Provenzano ). This desmoplastic stroma is composed of lymphocytes, leukocytes and cancer-associated fibroblasts, which produce an extracellular matrix consisting of proteins such as collagens, hyaluronic acids and other proteins (Mahadevan and Von Hoff, 2007). Among them, the calcium-binding protein secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC) has recently gained increasing attention as it interacts with and modulates the extracellular matrix and influences cell migration as well as angiogenesis and tissue remodelling (Nagaraju ). It is overexpressed in PDAC compared with normal pancreatic tissue and increases the invasiveness of PDAC cells (Guweidhi ). The peritumoral expression of the stromal component SPARC (also known as osteonectin-1, ON-1) has been linked to a worse prognosis in previous studies of resected PDAC, whereas the data on the impact of tumoral SPARC expression on pt outcome are conflicting in this context (Infante ; Sinn ). Surprisingly, stromal SPARC expression has been shown to be associated with improved treatment response to nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel (nab-paclitaxel)-treated aPDAC pts enrolled within an early phase I/II study, resulting in increased survival (Von Hoff ). This effect was attributed to the affinity of SPARC to binding albumin, resulting in a depletion of tumoral stroma and an improved chemotherapy delivery to the tumour cells (Von Hoff ). In fact, similar results have been obtained in genetically engineered mouse models of PDAC and smaller pts studies using nab-paclitaxel (Alvarez ), although there seems to be limited effects of SPARC expression on nab-paclitaxel efficacy in mice (Neesse ). In contrast, a recently published post hoc analysis of the pivotal phase III MPACT trial comparing nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine vs gemcitabine alone did not show a significant effect of SPARC expression on overall survival (OS) or on nab-paclitaxel efficacy in metastatic PDAC pts (Hidalgo ). As the majority of the previously published studies mainly focused on resected PDAC pts, the prognostic significance of SPARC expression in the peritumoral stroma and in the tumour cells has not been extensively studied in advanced PDAC (aPDAC) yet. We thus examined the association of tumoral SPARC expression and its expression in the peritumoral stroma with clinicopathological parameters and survival times in a well-defined aPDAC population treated with various regimens of non-nab-paclitaxel-containing palliative first-line chemotherapy.

Patients and methods

PDAC pt population

Samples of 134 aPDAC pts were collected retrospectively from pts treated within three terminated German multicentre chemotherapy trials (Heinemann ; Boeck ; Heinemann ), as well as from a prospective single-centre biomarker study performed at the Comprehensive Cancer Center of Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich (CCCLMU). Patients treated within the AIO-PK0104 phase III study were only included in the current analysis if they were enrolled before amendment 1 (active from March 2006 on) that added erlotinib to first-line chemotherapy with either gemcitabine or capecitabine (Boeck ). Clinical data were retrieved from the participating hospitals and the studies databases. Only pts receiving conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy were included into the current SPARC biomarker study, excluding pts treated with targeted agents (such as erlotinib) or nab-paclitaxel. The OS times were calculated from the start of palliative first-line chemotherapy to death from any cause. This retrospective biomarker study was approved by the local ethics committee of Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich (approval number 554-11). All pts included in the clinical studies gave written informed consent before any study-specific procedure was performed; pts included in our local prospective biomarker CCCLMU database provided informed consent for the use of their clinical data, blood and archival tumour tissue for scientific research.

Tumour samples, SPARC immunohistochemistry and scoring algorithm

We retrieved formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded archival tumour tissue of 134 aPDAC pts irrespective of the tissue origin (primary or metastatic, resection or biopsy). To examine the tumoral and stromal SPARC expression using immunohistochemistry (IHC) on 4 μm whole-mount tissue sections, a Ventana Benchmark XT autostainer was used (Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA). Briefly, the slides were dewaxed and antigenicity was retrieved using the Ventana antigen retrieval solution CC1 (pH 8.4, Ventana) for 30 min. The slides were then incubated with the mouse monoclonal SPARC antibody (1 : 800 dilution, clone ON-1, Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) for 32 min, and after secondary antibody incubation (Ultraview Kit; Ventana) the staining was visualised using diaminobenzidine (Ventana). Appropriate positive (human placenta) and negative control tissue (human skeletal muscle) were included in each staining run (Supplementary Figure S1). The intensity of SPARC expression in the peritumoral stroma was assessed using a two-tier scoring system according to Illei ) by two experienced pathologists (SO and TK) blinded to the pts' clinical outcome. Briefly, absent or weak SPARC staining in <25% of the stroma was classified as low expression (low), while moderate to strong SPARC staining in over 25% of the tumour stroma was considered as high expression (high). Equally, cytoplasmic SPARC expression in the carcinoma cells was assessed, defining an absent or faint and speckled cytoplasmic staining in <10% of the tumour cells as absent expression and thus as SPARC-negative case. In contrast, a clearly detectable weak, moderate or strong cytoplasmic staining intensity in over 10% of the tumour cells was considered a SPARC-positive case. Discrepant cases were discussed until agreement was reached. The results were correlated with the pts previously determined clinicopathological parameters and survival times (progression-free survival (PFS) and OS) from the beginning of palliative chemotherapy on.

Statistical analyses

The Kaplan–Meier method with log-rank tests and Cox regression were used for univariate survival analyses. For multivariate analysis a stepwise forward Cox regression was applied. The relation of SPARC expression and its relation with pts clinicopathological characteristics were evaluated using χ2-tests.

Results

Patient characteristics and clinicopathological variables

A total of 107 of the 134 included pts were treated within prospective clinical trials (e.g., 58 pts (Heinemann ), 29 pts (Boeck ) and 15 pts (Heinemann )) and 27 pts were derived from an ongoing prospective PDAC biomarker study conducted at the CCCLMU. Median age within the study population (79 male and 55 female) was 62 years. Eighty-three pts had a Karnofsky performance status (KPS) >80%, which was associated with an improved OS (6.7 vs 10.6 months; hazard ratio (HR) 1.537, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.051–2.249, P=0.025; Table 1; Supplementary Figure S2A) but not PFS (P=0.062, Supplementary Figure S2B). Fourteen pts had locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC) and 120 pts metastatic disease at chemotherapy initiation, with the latter being associated with shorter OS and PFS from the beginning of palliative chemotherapy on (OS 8.0 vs 12.0 months, HR 1.705, 95% CI 0.891–3.265, P=0.103; PFS 10.0 vs 6.8 months, HR 1.795, 95% CI 0.864–3.729, P=0.111; Table 1; Supplementary Figure S2C and D), though not statistically significant (potentially due to the small sample size of LAPC pts). In all, 112 pts received gemcitabine-based first-line treatment and an additional 22 pts fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy, respectively, with no significant difference in OS (8.3 vs 7.2 months; HR 1.552, 95% CI 0.970–2.482, P=0.064; Supplementary Figure S2E); however, PFS was longer in pts treated with a gemcitabine-containing first-line regimen (7.4 vs 4.0 months, HR 2.111, 95% CI 1.226–3.635, P=0.006; Supplementary Figure S2F). A total of 14 pts had no apparent metastasis upon treatment initation (LAPC pts), 84 pts had a single metastatic site and 36 pts had more than one metastatic site, which was not significantly associated with shorter PFS or OS (for details see Table 1 as well as Supplementary Figure S2G and H). Median OS calculated from the initiation of palliative chemotherapy of the entire study cohort was 8.3 months (95% CI 7.05–9.51). Neither pt age group (<60 years vs ⩾60 years) nor sex or tumour grading was associated with PFS or OS (Table 1).
Table 1

Frequency of the patients' clinicopathological characteristics (sex, age, KPS, disease stage at start of first-line chemotherapy, type of first-line chemotherapy, tumour grade and number of metastatic sites) and correlation with corresponding overall and progression-free survival

 nOS (months)P (log-rank)HR95% CIPFS (months)P (log-rank)HR95% CI
Sex
Male798.30.8520.9660.668–1.3957.00.6811.0940.712–1.681
Female557.3   4.7   
Age group
<60 years548.30.34811930.825–1.7256.80.6821.0940.712–1.681
⩾60 years807.9   7.0   
KPS
⩽80516.70.02515371.051–2.2494.60.0621.5090.976–2.332
>808310.6   7.6   
Stage at start of palliative CTX
Locally advanced1412.00.10317050.89–3.26510.00.1111.7950.864–3.729
Metastatic1208.0   6.8   
First-line CTX, CTX type
Gemcitabine-based1128.30.06415520.970–2.4827.40.0062.1111.226–3.635
Fluoropyrimidine-based227.2   4.0   
Tumour grade
G1–G2549.20.24312460.861–1.8028.70.1231.4050.910–2.169
G3–G4807.9   6.6   
Metastatic sites
01412.00.22012810.945–1.73710.00.0841,5091.049–2.170
1848.3   7.0   
>1367.3   5.5   

Kaplan–Meier estimates, log-rank tests and Cox regression.

Abbreviations: CI=confidence interval; CTX=chemotherapy; HR=hazard ratio; KPS=Karnofsky performance status; OS=(median) overall survival; PFS=(median) progression-free survival.

Stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC expression

Stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC expression was examined in 134 samples, with available corresponding clinicopathological data. Archival tissue origin was primary tumour (PT) in 64 cases (including 45 resected specimens) and metastasis (M) in 70 pts. SPARC expression in the desmoplastic peritumoral stroma was heterogeneously distributed, with an accentuated expression in the stromal tissue close to carcinoma cells (Figure 1). Of 134 samples, 90 (67%) showed a high and 44 (33%) a low expression of SPARC in the peritumoral stroma. Cytoplasmic SPARC expression was homogenously distributed throughout the carcinoma cells, though much weaker than in the adjacent desmoplastic stroma (Figure 1). Of 134 samples, 74 (55%) showed a measurable positive cytoplasmic SPARC expression, whereas 60 (45%) were classified as SPARC negative. No statistically significant correlation between stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC expression was detected (P=0.268; Supplementary Table S1).
Figure 1

Variable stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC expression in PDAC tissue. Immunohistochemical staining of SPARC (ON-1) in exemplary PDAC tissue shows variable expression in the peritumoral stroma and tumoral cytoplasm. Magnification= × 200. Scale bars indicate 50 μm.

SPARC expression, clinicopathological variables and survival analyses

First, we examined the association of the possibly confounding clinicopathological variables sex, age group, disease stage, KPS, tissue origin, tumour grading and number of metastatic sites within the stromal as well as the cytoplasmic SPARC expression subgroup and detected no statistically significant interactions, besides a higher number of cytoplasmic SPARC-positive cases in pts with a KPS ⩽80 (67% vs 44%, P=0.010; Supplementary Table S2). Overall, high stromal SPARC expression was not associated with PFS (7.0 vs 5.9 months; HR 1.254, 95% CI 0.805–1.953, P=0.314) nor with OS (9.1 vs 7.6 months; HR 0.823, 95% CI 0.562–1.205, P=0.316; Table 2; Figure 2A and B). We obtained similar results for stromal SPARC in the PT and the M subgroup (PT subgroup: 10.8 vs 8.3 months, P=0.857; M subgroup: 7.8 vs 6.8 months, P=0.319; Table 2; Supplementary Figure S3A and B). In contrast, we detected a statistically significant inferior PFS and OS for pts showing a positive cytoplasmic SPARC expression (PFS: 6.2 vs 8.6 months, HR 1.878, 95% CI 1.208–2.921, P=0.0045; OS: 7.8 vs 8.4 months, HR 1.505, 95% CI 1.034–2.190, P=0.032; Figure 2C and D). This effect in fact was restricted to the PT subgroup (PFS: 6.7 vs 10.8 months, P=0.004; OS: 7.9 vs 11.9 months, P=0.030; Figure 2E and F), as we found no significant difference in our survival analyses between cytoplasmic SPARC-positive and cytoplasmic SPARC-negative cases in the M subgroup (PFS: 5.8 vs 6.6 months, P=0.502; OS: 7.0 vs 7.8 months, P=0.452; Table 2; Supplementary Figure S3C and D).
Table 2

Correlation of overall and progression-free survival (Kaplan–Meier estimates, log-rank tests and Cox regression) according to stromal or cytoplasmic SPARC expression in the total study population, in the primary tumour and metastatic tissue subgroups and in the gemcitabine-based and fluoropyrimidine- based treatment subgroups

 n%OS (months)P (log-rank)HR95% CIPFS (months)P (log-rank)HR95% CI
Stromal SPARC
Total          
 High90679.10.3160.8230.562–1.2057.00.3141.2540.805–1.953
 Low44347.6   5.9   
Primary tumour          
 High467210.80.8570.9480.528–1.7018.60.7921.0990.543–2.224
 Low18188.3   7.4   
Metastasis          
 High44637.80.3190.7720.463–1.2876.60.5391.1990.671–2.141
 Low26376.8   4.1   
Cytoplasmic SPARC
Total          
 Positive74557.80.0321,5051.034–2.1906.20.0041.8781.208–2.921
 Negative60458.4   8.6   
Primary tumour          
 Positive36567.90.0301,8391.054–3.2116.70.0042.6801.335–5.379
 Negative284411.9   10.8   
Metastasis          
 Positive38557.00.4521,2160.730–2.0255.80.5021.2150.688–2.145
 Negative32457.8   6.6   
Gemcitabine subgroup
Stromal SPARC          
 High7262.59.90.1800.7620.499–1.1417.80.1921.3790.848–2.242
 Low4037.57.6   5.8   
Cytoplasmic SPARC          
 Positive6053.67.30.0121.6931.114–2.5606.20.0022.1581.319–3.531
 Negative5246.49.9   9.2   
Fluopyrimidine subgroup
Stromal SPARC          
 High1881.87.20.7651.1920.386–3.6464.00.6510.7510.210–2.694
 Low418.24.0   2.2   
Cytoplasmic SPARC          
 Positive1463.69.10.1060.4740.188–1.1976.70.0320.2820.082–0.966
 Negative836.44.1   2.2   

Abbreviations: CI=confidence interval; HR=hazard ratio; OS=(median) overall survival; PFS=(median) progression-free survival; SPARC=secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteins.

Figure 2

Cytoplasmic but not stromal SPARC expression correlates with inferior overall survival ( Univariate analysis (Kaplan–Meier curves and log-rank tests) of (A and B) stromal and (C and D) cytoplasmic SPARC expression as a biomarker in the tumour tissue of aPDAC pts treated with palliative, non-nab-paclitaxel containing chemotherapy; cytoplasmic SPARC expression in the (E and F) primary tumour subgroup. Crossed lines indicate censored cases.

In order to test whether the stromal or cytoplasmic SPARC expression could additionally interact with the efficacy of the applied chemotherapy, we exploratively compared PFS and OS according to SPARC expression levels in the first-line gemcitabine-based treated (n=112) and in the first-line fluoropyrimidine-based treated (n=22) pt populations; this of note was done as an unplanned subgroup analysis. A positive cytoplasmic SPARC expression was significantly associated with inferior PFS and OS in the gemcitabine-treated group (PFS: 6.2 vs 9.2 months, P=0.002; OS: 7.3 vs 9.9 months, P=0.012; Table 2; Figure 3A and B), whereas no such association was detected within the smaller fluoropyrimidine-treated subgroup (PFS: 6.7 vs 2.2 months, P=0.032; OS: 9.1 vs 4.1 months, P=0.106; Figure 3C and D). In contrast, there rather was a trend for a better OS and a longer PFS in fluoropyrimidine-treated pts with a positive cytoplasmic SPARC expression. We found no differences in PFS or OS according to stromal SPARC expression neither in the gemcitabine- nor in the fluoropyrimidine-treated subgroups (Table 2; Supplementary Figure S4A–D).
Figure 3

Cytoplasmic SPARC expression as a potential negative predictive biomarker for overall survival ( Univariate analysis (Kaplan–Meier curves and log-rank tests) of cytoplasmic SPARC expression in the tumour tissue of (A and B) gemcitabine-based treated aPDAC pts and (C and D) fluoropyrimidine-based treated aPDAC pts. Crossed lines indicate censored cases.

Within stepwise forward multivariate Cox regression analyses adjusting for KPS, tumour grading, number of metastatic sites, stage of disease and cytoplasmic SPARC expression, KPS group was the only independent prognostic factor for OS (HR 1.483, 95%CI 1.012–2.174, P=0.043), whereas cytoplasmic SPARC expression remained borderline significant (HR 1.454, 95%CI 0.977–2.212, P=0.052). Interestingly, cytoplasmic SPARC expression was an independent factor for a poorer PFS in the overall study population (HR 1.878, P=0.005) and also for both PFS (HR 2.262, P=0.001) and OS (HR 1.689, P=0.014) in gemcitabine-treated pts (Supplementary Table S3).

Discussion

To our knowledge, this is one of the first biomarker studies examining the peritumoral and cytoplasmic SPARC expression in aPDAC pts that did not receive nab-paclitaxel containing palliative chemotherapy. Using IHC, we were able to show that SPARC expression in PDAC tissue can reliably be assessed in resected tumour samples, as well as in biopsies independently from the tissue origin, that is, primary or metastatic tumours. In line with previously published studies (Sinn ; Gundewar ), we were able to show in our well-defined study cohort (80% of the included pts were treated within prospective clinical trials) that a high SPARC expression in the peritumoral stroma occurs in the majority of PDAC tumours, but had no association with PFS or OS in none of the studied subgroups (Table 2). In contrast, cytoplasmic SPARC expression was associated with an inferior PFS and OS in the gemcitabine-treated subgroup and also in the overall study population when PT samples were examined. Additional multivariate analyses confirmed cytoplasmic SPARC expression as an independent factor for PFS and OS in gemcitabine-treated pts. Several studies on SPARC expression in PDAC – using different detection systems and scoring methods – have been published so far, overall resulting in controversial data (Prenzel ; Infante ; Mantoni ; Miyoshi ; Von Hoff ; Sinn ; Gundewar ; Hidalgo ; Table 3). Concerning stromal SPARC expression, our findings in aPDAC are in contrast to previously published studies in resected PDAC, demonstrating inferior OS and a lack of gemcitabine efficacy in pts with high stromal SPARC expression (Infante ; Sinn ), as well as increased tumour progression (Gundewar ). In a translational analysis from the adjuvant CONKO-001 study, the prognostic effect of peritumoral SPARC expression was limited to pts treated with adjuvant gemcitabine, supporting the idea of stromal SPARC as a potential negative predictive biomarker for adjuvant chemotherapy (Sinn ). This observation may be due to increased SPARC expression in dense desmoplastic stroma and is in line with the hypothesis of the peritumoral stroma as a treatment barrier in PDAC (Provenzano ). Accordingly, studies have identified stromal SPARC expression as a treatment target of nab-paclitaxel-based chemotherapy (Von Hoff ; Alvarez ), thus reducing the desmoplastic stroma and offering a survival advantage for PDAC pts. However, the idea of the peritumoral stroma as a mere treatment barrier in PDAC may be too simplistic as it does not reflect the complex signalling interaction between the stromal and the epithelial compartment. Indeed, activated stromal cells have been shown to have a tumour-promoting effect (Moffitt ), resulting in decreased survival, which can be overcome by stromal modulation (Sherman ). On the other hand, recent preclinical data showed a deleterious effect of myofibroblast depletion in genetically engineered mouse models of PDAC, resulting in poor tumour differentiation, increased aggressiveness, proliferation, vascularisation and immunosuppression, finally leading to inferior OS (Özdemir ; Rhim ). Moreover, as the data on the prognostic role of the peritumoral stroma in humans (as measured by α-SMA expression) are still conflicting (Özdemir ; Sinn ) and clinical trials for stromal depletion in PDAC have failed (Bramhall ; Moore ) clear conclusions on this subject cannot be drawn yet. Especially, the exact functions and interactions of each stromal component, such as myofibroblasts, extracellular matrix, pancreatic stellate cells and immune cells in tumour promotion or inhibition are contradictory, context dependent and still poorly understood in its complexity (Neesse ).
Table 3

Overview of previously published studies on SPARC expression in PDAC

AuthorYearClinical situationCasesMethodAntibodyTissue typeScoring method, stromaScoring method, cytoplasmCutoffStromal hiCytoplasmic hiSPARC clinical relevance/conclusion
Prenzel2006rPDAC31qPCRNASnap-frozen fresh resection specimensNANANANANANo prognostic significance or association to clinicopathologic variables of SPARC mRNA expression was detected
Infante2007rPDAC299IHCMs monoclonal clone ON-1, ZymedResection specimens TMAAbsent, weak (+), moderate (++), strong (+++)Same as for stroma/not specified furtherNegative: absent or weak in <10% positive: moderate or strong in ⩾10%66.9%31.4%SPARC expression in peritumoral fibroblasts was an independent prognostic biomarker, whereas tumoral SPARC expression was not
Mantoni2008laPDAC58IHCMs monoclonal, ZymedBiopsies whole mountCombined semiquantitative score (intensity 0, 1, 2, 3) quantity (0=<5%, 1=5–25%, 2=26–50%, 3=>50%)NAIntensity 0 vs intensity 1–4NRNRSPARC expression in the stroma not directly adjacent to the tumour was a negative prognostic biomarker
Miyoshi2010rPDAC104qPCRNAResection specimensNANANANANAHigh SPARC mRNA level was an independent negative prognostic biomarker
von Hoff2011mPDAC36IHCOne monoclonal and one polyclonal, not further specifiedNot specifiedProprietary methodology: 7 tissue components evaluated (tumour, fibroblasts, immune cells, not further specified using two antibodies, each component three measures (maximum intensity, percentage at maximum intensity, overall score), resulting in 42 variables per tumour. Standardised via z-score and averaged between two observers.NAHigh SPARC: z-scores ⩾0; low SPARC: z-scores <0High SPARC 52.8% (according to z-score). Stromal or tumoral SPARC expression not reported separatelyHigh SPARC (according to z-score) was a significant predictor for OS in nab-paclitaxel-treated patients. Stromal SPARC was significantly associated with OS but not SPARC in tumour cells 
Sinn2014rPDAC160IHCMs monoclonal clone 15G12, NovocastraResection specimens TMAIntensity (negative=0, weak=1, moderate=2, strong=3)Percentage (0%=0–>80%=4) and intensity (0–3 as for stroma); multiplied to IRS 0–12Stroma: strong=strong; cytoplasm: IRS ⩾3=high58.1%26.3%Strong stromal and high cytoplasmic SPARC expression were both associated with poor DFS and OS in pts treated with adjuvant gemcitabine
Gundewar2014rPDAC88IHCMs monoclonal clone 15G12, LeicaResection specimens type not specified>10% considered positive, semiquantitative score for intensity (0=absent, 1=weak, 2=moderate, 3=strong)NA0+1=low, 2+3=high15.9%NRHigh stromal SPARC expression was an independent negative prognostic biomarker. No association to type of CTX
Hidalgo2015mPDACStroma: 256; cytoplasm: 301IHCMs monoclonal clone ON-1, InvitrogenNot specified0=absent, 1+=<25% positive at 200 × /400 ×, 2+=⩾25–49% positive at 100 × to 200 ×, 3+=⩾50% at 20 × to 40 ×H-score: % positive cells × staining intensityStroma: 3+=high, <3+=low; cytoplasm: H-score ⩾100=high, <100=low, absent=negative28.0%3.0%High stromal and high cytoplasmic SPARC expression were not associated to OS in nab-paclitaxel- and gemcitabine-treated pts
Ormanns2016laPDAC+mPDAC134IHCMs monoclonal clone ON-1, InvitrogenBiopsies and resection specimens whole mountNegative (low)=absent or weak in <25% positive (high)=moderate to strong in ⩾25%0=absent, 1=faint or <10% positive, 2=weak in⩾10%, 3=moderate or strong in ⩾10%Stroma: high vs low; cytoplasm: negative=0 or 1, positive=2 or 367.2%55.2%Stromal SPARC expression was not associated to OS. Cytoplasmic SPARC expression was an independent predictor of poor PFS in the overall study population and of poor OS and PFS in the gemcitabine-based treated pts

Abbreviations: IHC=immunohistochemistry; laPDAC=locally advanced PDAC; mPDAC=metastatic PDAC; Ms=mouse; NA=not applicable; NR=not reported; ON-1=osteonectin-1; PDAC=pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; qPCR=quantitative PCR; rPDAC=resected PDAC; SPARC=secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteins; TMA=tissue microarray.

Data from the large phase III MPACT study recently confirmed an OS benefit for the combination of nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine compared with gemcitabine alone (Von Hoff ; Hidalgo ). Thus, nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine has evolved as a new standard treatment option in pts with metastatic PDAC (Borazanci and Von Hoff, 2014). However, a predictive role of high stromal SPARC expression for nab-paclitaxel efficacy could not be confirmed in a detailed translational analysis from MPACT (Hidalgo ). This recently published post hoc sub-study (n=301 out of 861) reported much lower rates of high stromal and notably of high tumoral SPARC expression and did not show a significant effect of stromal or tumoral SPARC expression on OS in both chemotherapy subgroups and the overall study population (Hidalgo ). In our study reported here, we used the same antibody (ON-1 (Invitrogen)) as the MPACT investigators, and the assessment of stromal SPARC expression was done by a previously reported and validated scoring system (Illei ). In line with the findings from MPACT, we did not detect a significant negative association of high stromal SPARC expression and PFS or OS. Indeed, high stromal SPARC expression was even associated with a trend towards an improved OS, though not statistically significant (9.1 vs 7.6 months, P=0.316; Table 2). The high rate of cytoplasmic SPARC positivity in our study and its association with a worse PFS and OS are in stark contrast to the translational MPACT results (Hidalgo ), which is most likely due to a much more sensitive cutoff for SPARC positivity used in our study. In fact, using the same stringent cutoff as the MPACT investigators, we would have obtained a similarly low percentage of cytoplasmic SPARC expression (2.3%), which was – as expected – not associated with OS (P=0.411). The conflicting results on stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC as a prognostic or predictive biomarker in PDAC may partially be based on different methodology concerning protein detection and staining evaluation but also on the origin of the tumour samples examined (Table 3). Notably, in the translational MPACT study primarily tissue samples from metastatic lesions or unidentified origin were used, whereas only 11% were confirmed pancreatic lesions. In contrast, all the studies confirming SPARC either as prognostic (Infante ; Gundewar ) and/or predictive (Sinn ) biomarker, were performed on resected primary PDAC tumours. Differential SPARC expression in primary and metastatic tissue has been reported (Guweidhi ), which we could not confirm in the present study. Using both PT samples (n=70) as well as metastatic tissue (n=64), we detected nearly identical rates of stromal and cytoplasmic SPARC expression in both subgroups. Notably, a prognostic impact of cytoplasmic SPARC expression was detected in the PT subgroup only. A main limitation for this preliminary observation may be based on the fact that within our PT subgroup both tumour tissues from the pancreatic primary of pts with metachronous (that previously underwent surgical pancreatic resection) and of pts with synchronous metastatic disease were included. This novel clinical finding, however, could be in line with a functional role for cytoplasmic SPARC in pre-metastatic tumour progression, as SPARC pre-clinically has been shown to increase the invasive properties of PDAC tumour cells (Guweidhi ; Seux ), possibly via induction of matrix metalloproteases or modulation of their activity (Vaz ). In addition, we observed (within an explorative subgroup analysis) a potential survival benefit of a low or absent cytoplasmic SPARC expression for pts receiving gemcitabine-based treatment, whereas no such significant association was found for the smaller group of fluoropyrimidine-based treated pts. In the latter subgroup there even was a trend towards improved PFS and OS for pts with cytoplasmic SPARC-expressing tumours. However, the statistical power in the fluoropyrimidine subgroup was clearly limited due to the rather small sample size (n=22). One thus might at least hypothesise a negative predictive role of cytoplasmic SPARC expression for gemcitabine efficacy; if that observation could be confirmed by other groups, a possible biomarker for a treatment decision between gemcitabine- or fluoropyrimidine-based first-line regimens according to cytoplasmic SPARC expression in aPDAC pts could perhaps be obtained. Its retrospective nature, the heterogeneous chemotherapy regimens applied, as well as the use of both biopsy material and resection specimens can be considered as the main limitations of our translational biomarker study. However, these characteristics may at least in part also be interpreted as strength of the current study, as our findings hold true for a broad range of clinically variable aPDAC pts that reflect daily clinical practice. Specifically, the important observation that the kind of tissue origin (primary vs metastatic) may have a significant impact on the value of a biomarker in PDAC is of high relevance for future biomarker trials in this disease. In this context, investigators should also keep in mind that tumour tissue from the pancreatic primary may perform differently in biomarker studies based on the time point of collection (e.g., archival tissue from a previous surgery in curative intent vs biopsy of the primary in a pt with synchronous metastatic disease). Thus, the need for repeated biopsies in future PADC biomarker studies arises in order to generate the best translational evidence possible. Taken together, our data and previously published studies (Infante ; Gundewar ) indicate that stromal SPARC expression in PDAC may serve as a prognostic biomarker only in primarily resected PDAC, whereas no such association can be found in the metastatic PDAC situation. In contrast, our findings show that cytoplasmic SPARC expression may serve as biomarker associated with inferior PFS and OS in non-nab-paclitaxel-treated aPDAC pts (with this effect being restricted to the PT subgroup) and may furthermore potentially also act as a negative predictive biomarker for the efficacy of gemcitabine-based chemotherapy in aPDAC. An external validation of these hypothesis-generating results is necessary and strongly recommended; ideally, such a confirmatory biomarker study should of course be performed within a prospective clinical trial. Specifically, the role of tumoral/cytoplasmatic SPARC expression in PT specimens and its impact on treatment outcome should for example be re-investigated within the global APACT trial (that has already completed recruitment), which compares adjuvant gemcitabine vs gemcitabine plus nab-paclitaxel for 6 months after curative-intent resection of PDAC (NCT01964430).
  35 in total

Review 1.  Translational research in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: current evidence and future concepts.

Authors:  Stephan Kruger; Michael Haas; Steffen Ormanns; Sibylle Bächmann; Jens T Siveke; Thomas Kirchner; Volker Heinemann; Stefan Boeck
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2014-08-21       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 2.  Tumor-stroma interactions in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Daruka Mahadevan; Daniel D Von Hoff
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2007-04-03       Impact factor: 6.261

3.  Projecting cancer incidence and deaths to 2030: the unexpected burden of thyroid, liver, and pancreas cancers in the United States.

Authors:  Lola Rahib; Benjamin D Smith; Rhonda Aizenberg; Allison B Rosenzweig; Julie M Fleshman; Lynn M Matrisian
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2014-06-01       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Enzymatic targeting of the stroma ablates physical barriers to treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Paolo P Provenzano; Carlos Cuevas; Amy E Chang; Vikas K Goel; Daniel D Von Hoff; Sunil R Hingorani
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2012-03-20       Impact factor: 31.743

5.  Osteonectin influences growth and invasion of pancreatic cancer cells.

Authors:  Ahmed Guweidhi; Jörg Kleeff; Hassan Adwan; Nathalia A Giese; Moritz N Wente; Thomas Giese; Markus W Büchler; Martin R Berger; Helmut Friess
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 12.969

6.  TP53INP1 decreases pancreatic cancer cell migration by regulating SPARC expression.

Authors:  M Seux; S Peuget; M P Montero; C Siret; V Rigot; P Clerc; V Gigoux; E Pellegrino; L Pouyet; P N'Guessan; S Garcia; M Dufresne; J L Iovanna; A Carrier; F André; N J Dusetti
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2011-02-21       Impact factor: 9.867

7.  The role of SPARC expression in pancreatic cancer progression and patient survival.

Authors:  Chinmay Gundewar; Agata Sasor; Katarzyna Said Hilmersson; Roland Andersson; Daniel Ansari
Journal:  Scand J Gastroenterol       Date:  2015-03-12       Impact factor: 2.423

8.  Capecitabine plus oxaliplatin (CapOx) versus capecitabine plus gemcitabine (CapGem) versus gemcitabine plus oxaliplatin (mGemOx): final results of a multicenter randomized phase II trial in advanced pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  S Boeck; T Hoehler; G Seipelt; R Mahlberg; A Wein; A Hochhaus; H-P Boeck; B Schmid; E Kettner; M Stauch; F Lordick; Y Ko; M Geissler; K Schoppmeyer; G Kojouharoff; A Golf; S Neugebauer; V Heinemann
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2007-10-24       Impact factor: 32.976

9.  Stromal disrupting effects of nab-paclitaxel in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  R Alvarez; M Musteanu; E Garcia-Garcia; P P Lopez-Casas; D Megias; C Guerra; M Muñoz; Y Quijano; A Cubillo; J Rodriguez-Pascual; C Plaza; E de Vicente; S Prados; S Tabernero; M Barbacid; F Lopez-Rios; M Hidalgo
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2013-08-01       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  SPARC independent drug delivery and antitumour effects of nab-paclitaxel in genetically engineered mice.

Authors:  Albrecht Neesse; Kristopher K Frese; Derek S Chan; Tashinga E Bapiro; William J Howat; Frances M Richards; Volker Ellenrieder; Duncan I Jodrell; David A Tuveson
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2013-09-25       Impact factor: 23.059

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  8 in total

Review 1.  Do anti-stroma therapies improve extrinsic resistance to increase the efficacy of gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer?

Authors:  Chen Liang; Si Shi; Qingcai Meng; Dingkong Liang; Shunrong Ji; Bo Zhang; Yi Qin; Jin Xu; Quanxing Ni; Xianjun Yu
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2017-10-09       Impact factor: 9.261

Review 2.  [Personalized cancer medicine : Biomarkers for molecular therapy stratification in pancreatic carcinoma].

Authors:  S Ormanns
Journal:  Pathologe       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 1.011

3.  The Impact of SMAD4 Loss on Outcome in Patients with Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated with Systemic Chemotherapy.

Authors:  Steffen Ormanns; Michael Haas; Anna Remold; Stephan Kruger; Stefan Holdenrieder; Thomas Kirchner; Volker Heinemann; Stefan Boeck
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-05-19       Impact factor: 5.923

4.  The impact of SPARC expression on the survival of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma patients after curative resection.

Authors:  Masaaki Murakawa; Toru Aoyama; Yohei Miyagi; Satoshi Kobayashi; Makoto Ueno; Manabu Morimoto; Masakatsu Numata; Naoto Yamamoto; Hiroshi Tamagawa; Norio Yukawa; Yasushi Rino; Munetaka Masuda; Soichiro Morinaga
Journal:  J Cancer       Date:  2019-01-01       Impact factor: 4.207

Review 5.  The Impact of Biomarkers in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma on Diagnosis, Surveillance and Therapy.

Authors:  Niklas Sturm; Thomas J Ettrich; Lukas Perkhofer
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-03       Impact factor: 6.639

6.  The role of weekly nanoparticle albumin bound paclitaxel monotherapy as second line or later treatment for advanced NSCLC in China.

Authors:  Puyuan Xing; Yixiang Zhu; Ling Shan; Sipeng Chen; Xuezhi Hao; Junling Li
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-09-20

7.  Treatment of advanced gastrointestinal cancer with genetically modified autologous mesenchymal stem cells - TREAT-ME-1 - a phase I, first in human, first in class trial.

Authors:  Hanno Niess; Volker Heinemann; Jobst C von Einem; Sylvia Peter; Christine Günther; Hans-Dieter Volk; Gerald Grütz; Christoph Salat; Oliver Stoetzer; Peter J Nelson; Marlies Michl; Dominik P Modest; Julian W Holch; Martin Angele; Christiane Bruns
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-09-16

8.  Increased SPARC expression is associated with neoadjuvant therapy in resectable pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Christopher Hartley; Daniel Rowan; Xiuxu Chen; Luisa Gomez-Arellano; Anna Marie West; Kiyoko Oshima; Alexander Craig Mackinnon
Journal:  Pract Lab Med       Date:  2020-05-29
  8 in total

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