| Literature DB >> 28927079 |
Haruko Kunitomi1, Kouji Banno1, Megumi Yanokura1, Takashi Takeda1, Moito Iijima1, Kanako Nakamura1, Miho Iida1, Masataka Adachi1, Keiko Watanabe1, Yusuke Matoba1, Yusuke Kobayashi1, Eiichiro Tominaga1, Daisuke Aoki1.
Abstract
The increasing incidence of obesity and diabetes due to changes in diet, earlier menarche, delayed menopause, late marriage, and declining birth rate have resulted in an increase in the number of endometrial cancer cases over the last few decades. Although surgical therapy is sufficient for early endometrial cancer, there is no effective therapy for patients with advanced and recurrent endometrial cancer. The oncogenic mechanism of endometrial cancer involves microsatellite instability (MSI) caused by dysfunction of DNA mismatch repair genes in 30% of patients. Immune checkpoint inhibitors, including anti-programmed death (PD)-1 and anti-PD-ligand 1 antibodies, are of interest as novel anticancer drugs; however, these drugs are currently expensive, and there is a need to select patients who will benefit from their use. The use of MSI analysis as a predictive biomarker for the therapeutic efficacy of these drugs may be useful for reducing the costs of drug therapy.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; endometrial cancer; immune checkpoint inhibitor; microsatellite instability; mismatch repair
Year: 2017 PMID: 28927079 PMCID: PMC5587995 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2017.6640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.MSI is caused by aberrant MMR genes. (a) Even if insertion occurs during DNA replication, the microsatellite repeat number is repaired by the MMR mechanism and generally returns to the original value. (b) If the MMR mechanism is dysfunctional due to MMR gene aberrations, the insertion is not repaired and the repeat number increases. These variations of microsatellite repeat numbers that are not repaired due to replication errors caused by MMR gene aberrations are referred to as MSI. MSI, microsatellite instability; MMR, mismatch repair.
Classification and characteristics of endometrial cancer [modified from (13)].
| POLE (ultramutated) | MSI (hypermutated) | Copy number low | Copy number high | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency | 7.3% | 28.0% | 38.8% | 25.9% |
| Copy number aberrations | Low | Low | Low | High |
| MSI status | Mixed | High | Stable | Stable |
| Mutation rate | Very high 232×106 | High 18×106 | Low 2.9×106 | Low 2.3×106 |
| mutations/Mb | mutations/Mb | mutations/Mb | mutations/Mb | |
| Genes commonly mutated | ||||
| Histological type | Endometrioid | Endometrioid | Endometrioid | Endometrioid, Serous, mixed |
| Tumor grade | Mixed (grade 1–3) | Mixed (grade 1–3) | Grade 1 and 2 | Grade 3 |
| Progression-free survival | Good | Intermediate | Intermediate | Poor |
Mb, megabase.
Figure 2.Action of antibodies against PD-L1 and PD-1 in tumor cells. Binding of PD-L1 expressed in tumor cells and PD-1 on the surface of T cells induces immune tolerance. Anti-PD-L1 antibody and anti-PD-1 antibody bind to PD-L1 and PD-1, respectively, to block immune tolerance, resulting in an enhanced antitumor effect of T cells.