| Literature DB >> 29882766 |
Lara Alessandrini1, Melissa Manchi2, Valli De Re3, Riccardo Dolcetti4, Vincenzo Canzonieri5.
Abstract
Gastric cancer (GC) is a common malignant neoplasm worldwide and one of the main cause of cancer-related deaths. Despite some advances in therapies, long-term survival of patients with advanced disease remains poor. Different types of classification have been used to stratify patients with GC for shaping prognosis and treatment planning. Based on new knowledge of molecular pathways associated with different aspect of GC, new pathogenetic classifications for GC have been and continue to be proposed. These novel classifications create a new paradigm in the definition of cancer biology and allow the identification of relevant GC genomic subsets by using different techniques such as genomic screenings, functional studies and molecular or epigenetic characterization. An improved prognostic classification for GC is essential for the development of a proper therapy for a proper patient population. The aim of this review is to discuss the state-of-the-art on combining histological and molecular classifications of GC to give an overview of the emerging therapeutic possibilities connected to the latest discoveries regarding GC.Entities:
Keywords: EBV infection; gastric cancer; gene expression profile; gene mutation; miRNA; microsatellite; molecular gastric cancer subtype; preclinical models
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29882766 PMCID: PMC6032377 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19061683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Key characteristics of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and the Asian Cancer Research Group (ACRG) molecular classifications of gastric cancer (GC). MSI, microsatellite instable; CIN, chromosome instable; GS, genome stable; EGJ, esophagogastric junction; MSS, microsatellite stable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| - Males >>> Females | - >>>Females | - Males >>> Females | - Males = Females | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| - Frequently EBV-positive | - Distal stomach | - TP53 mutation | - Diagnosed at younger age |
Figure 1The most relevant clinic-pathological and molecular features of TCGA subtypes.
Figure 2The most relevant targetable pathways in GC.
Gene alteration and their respective targeted drugs.
| Gene | Activity/Positivity | Molecular Alteration | Therapeutic Agents | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HER2 | Member of the EGF RTK family | Amplification | Trastuzumab + traditional chemotherapy (ToGA trial) | [ |
| EGFR | Member of the EGF RTK family; forms heterodimers with HER2 | Amplification | Panitumumab and cetuximab showed disappointing results in two large phase III trials; erlotinib and gefitinib were not effective | [ |
| MET | RTK family; interacts with HGF | Amplification | Rilotumumab was associated with significantly longer PFS and OS when added to chemotherapy in treatment-naive molecularly unselected patients with advanced GC; another anti-MET antibody, onartuzumab, did not show any advantage in combination with mFOLFOX | [ |
| VEGF | Factors of angiogenesis | Overexpression | Bevacizumab (AVAGAST trial) did not show increased OS | [ |
| FGFR | Fibroblast growth factor receptor family | Amplification | A phase II randomised trial is evaluating the activity of AZD4547, an inhibitor of FGFR 1–2 and 3, compared to paclitaxel in second-line treatment Other ongoing trials are testing dovitinib in FGFR2 amplified GC patients or in combination with docetaxel | [ |
| KRAS | RAS GTPase; recruits the cytosolic protein RAF | Mutation codon 12–13 | No target therapies are currently approved for this alteration in GC | [ |
| CDH1 | Tumour suppressor gene; encodes E-cadherin, a cell adhesion molecules | Mutations, hypermethylation, downregulated expression | Treatments targeting EMT are under study | [ |
| ARID1A | Tumour suppressor gene involved in chromatin remodelling | Inactivating mutations | No target therapies are currently approved for this alteration in GC | [ |
| RHOA | Rho GTPases are intracellular signaling molecules, regulating cytoskeleton organization, cell cycle and cell motility | Mutations | A recent trial tested IMAB362, a chimeric IgG1 antibody against CLDN18.2 showing clinical activity in patients with 2+/3+ immunostaining | [ |
Patient-derived preclinical models of GC: advantages and disadvantages.
| Cons | Pros | |
|---|---|---|
| Cell line xenografts | - monodimensional | - rapid analysis of drug response |
| PDX models | - limited source of material | - reliable representation of tumour heterogeneity |
| Organoids | - no tumour-microenvironment interaction | - high level of architectural and physiological similarity to native tissue |
Diagnostic and prognostic role of tissue-based GC-related miRNAs.
| miRNAs | Role | Expression in Tissue | Note | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-21 | Diagnostic | Upregulated | Overexpressed miR-21 binds to PDCD4 and can inhibit protein expression; directly related to tumour size, depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis and vascular invasion | [ |
| miR-21 | Diagnostic | Upregulated | - | [ |
| miR-31 | Diagnostic | Downregulated | - | [ |
| miR-32 | Diagnostic | Upregulated | - | [ |
| miR-106a | Diagnostic | Upregulated | Level of miR-106a is closely related to tumour size, differentiation degree, lymph node and distant metastasis | [ |
| miR-20 | Prognostic | Upregulated | [ | |
| miR-29 | Prognostic | Downregulated | This miRNA is associated with poor prognosis | [ |
| miR-106b | Prognostic | Upregulated | This miRNA is associated with poor prognosis | [ |
| miR-125a-5p | Prognostic | Downregulated | Multivariate analysis shows that its downregulation is an independent prognostic factor for survival | [ |
| miR-206 | Prognostic | Downregulated | mRNA-206 is an independent prognostic factor in GC patients | [ |
| miR-17-5p | Prognostic | Upregulated | - | [ |
| miR-10b | Prognostic | - | These seven miRNAs are significantly related to recurrence-free periods and overall survival of patients; an overexpression of miR-223 in primary GC is associated with less survival without metastasis | [ |
| miR-125b | Prognostic | Upregulated | These miRNAs are associated with progression of GC | [ |
| Let-7g | Prognostic | Upregulated | Levels of these miRNAs are associated with tumour infiltration depth, lymph node metastasis and tumour stage. | [ |
Expression and deregulation of miRNAs in gastric cancer.
| miRNAs | Relative Expression | Target Gene | Cell Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-146a | Upregulated | EGFR | Invasion | [ |
| miR-449 | Upregulated | MET | Cell proliferation | [ |
| miR-29a/c | Downregulated | VEGF | Vascular cell | [ |
| miR-181c | Upregulated | KRAS | Cell proliferation | [ |
| miR-221 | Upregulated | CDKN1A | Cell Cycle | [ |
| miR-200c | Upregulated | CDH | Metastasis | [ |
| miR-150 | Upregulated | EGR2 | Apoptosis | [ |
| miR-382 | Upregulated | PTEN | Angiogenesis | [ |
| miR-124 | Upregulated | ROCK1 | Cell proliferation | [ |
| miR-125a-5p | Upregulated | ERBB2 | Cell proliferation | [ |
| miR-145 | Downregulated | ETS1 | Migration | [ |