| Literature DB >> 29928492 |
Dipesh Kumar Yadav1, Xueli Bai1, Rajesh Kumar Yadav2, Alina Singh3, Guogang Li1, Tao Ma1, Wei Chen1, Tingbo Liang1.
Abstract
With dismal survival rate pancreatic cancer remains one of the most aggressive and devastating malignancy. Predominantly, due to the absence of a dependable methodology for early identification and limited therapeutic options for advanced disease. However, it takes over 17 years to develop pancreatic cancer from initiation of mutation to metastatic cancer; therefore, if diagnosed early; it may increase overall survival dramatically, thus, providing a window of opportunity for early detection. Recently, genomic expression analysis defined 4 subtypes of pancreatic cancer based on mutated genes. Hence, we need simple and standard, minimally invasive test that can monitor those altered genes or their associated pathways in time for the success of precision medicine, and liquid biopsy seems to be one answer to all these questions. Again, liquid biopsy has an ability to pair with genomic tests. Additionally, liquid biopsy based development of circulating tumor cells derived xenografts, 3D organoids system, real-time monitoring of genetic mutations by circulating tumor DNA and exosome as the targeted drug delivery vehicle holds lots of potential for the treatment and cure of pancreatic cancer. At present, diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is frantically done on the premise of CA19-9 and radiological features only, which doesn't give a picture of genetic mutations and epigenetic alteration involved. In this manner, the current diagnostic paradigm for pancreatic cancer diagnosis experiences low diagnostic accuracy. This review article discusses the current state of liquid biopsy in pancreatic cancer as diagnostic and therapeutic tools and future perspectives of research in the light of circulating tumor cells, circulating tumor DNA and exosomes.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cells; circulating tumor nucleic acids; exosomes; liquid biopsy; pancreatic cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 29928492 PMCID: PMC6003564 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.24809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Application of circulating biomarkers
(A) Application of blood-based liquid biopsy analysis over the span of pancreatic cancer management, peripheral venous blood is collected from the patients for isolation of circulating tumor cells (CTCs), circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and exosomes. These circulating biomarkers may be applied to guide initial diagnosis, treatment monitoring or planning, prognosis prediction and developing a new targeted therapy for patients with pancreatic cancer. (B) Functional studies with CTCs and development of CTC— derived xeno-grafts (CDXs), patient-derived tumor xeno-graft (PDTX) and 3D organoids model from CTCs for dynamic monitoring of PC and development of new targeted drugs after its molecular characterization and genomic analysis. (C) Clinical application of ctDNA as a tool for therapy monitoring. ctDNA can be obtained from plasma for genomic analysis, drug testing and use in personalized medicine according to the genomic and epigenomic alteration. (D) Clinical use of exosomes for drug development after genomic and immunological testing. Moreover, use of exosome as a drug delivery vehicle where it can be loaded with drugs, siRNAs, gene etc.
Studies of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in pancreatic cancer
| Study | Pts (N) | Stages | Controls | Time of Analysis | Platform | Markers | Findings | Sensitivity and Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zill | 18 | Advanced pancreatobiliary cancers | 8 biliary cancer | Post-treatment | NGS | KRAS, TP53, APC, SMAD4, and FBXW7 | Mutations were detected in 90.3% of cfDNA. The diagnostic accuracy of cfDNA sequencing was 97.7%, changes in cfDNA coordinated with tumor marker dynamics. | 92.3% and 100% |
| Cheng | 188 | Metastatic PC | NA | Pre-treatment | NGS and ddPCR | KRAS, BRCA2, EGFR and KDR | The KRAS mutation was detected in 72.3% (136/188) patients. The detection of ctDNA and response to treatment as assessed by CT imaging was 76.9%, the presence of ctDNA provided the earliest measure of treatment in 60% patients. | NA |
| Berger | 24 | Metastatic PC | 21 IPMN, 38 healthy controls, 26 patients with resected SCAs and 16 borderline IPMN | NA | ddPCR | KRAS | The KRAS mutation was detected in 41.7% (10/24) patients. KRAS mutation was not detected in cfDNA of controls, SCA, and IPMN. | NA |
| Sausen | 77 | stage II | NA | Pre-treatment and Post-treatment | NGS ddPCR | NA | ctDNA was detected in the 43% of patients with localized disease at diagnosis, and detection of ctDNA after resection predicts clinical relapse and poor prognosis. Moreover, ctDNA could detect recurrence 6.5 months earlier than with CT imaging. | NA |
| Henriksen | 95 | NA | 27 without evidence of malignancy, 97 CP and 59 AP | NA | EasyMag platform, PCR | BMP3, RASSF1A, BNC1, MESTv2, TFPI2, APC, SFRP1 and SFRP2 | The distinction in mean number of methylated genes in the PC group (8.41 (95% CI 7.62–9.20)) versus the aggregate control group (4.74 (95% CI 4.40-5.08)) was highly significant ( | NA |
| Tjensvoll | 14 | All stages | 29 healthy individuals | Pre-treatment and Post-treatment | PNA-clamp PCR | KRAS | KRAS mutation was detected in 71% of patients with PC. The pre-therapy ctDNA was a predictor of both progression-free and OS. Changes in ctDNA levels corresponded both with radiological follow-up data and CA19-9 levels. | NA |
| Maire | 47 | NA | 31 CP | Pre-treatment - | PCR and allele-specific amplification | KRAS2 | KRAS2 mutation was detected in 22 patients (47%) with PC and in 4 controls with CP (13%) ( | 47% and 87% |
| Pietrasz | 135 | All stages | NA | Pre-treatment and Post-treatment | NGS | NA | ctDNA was detected in 48% of patients with advanced PC, and ctDNA emerges as an independent prognostic marker in advanced PC and indicator of shorter DFS and shorter OS when detected after surgery. | NA |
PC: Pancreatic cancer; cfDNA: Cell-free DNA; PCR: Polymerase chain reaction; ddPCR: Droplet digital PCR; NGS: Next-generation sequencing; PNA-clamp PCR: Peptide nucleic acid clamping PCR; IPMN: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm; SCAs: Serous cystadenomas; DFS: Disease-free survival OS: Overall survival; CP: Chronic pancreatitis; AP: Acute pancreatitis; CT: Computed tomography; ctDNA: Circulating tumor DNA; NA: Not available.
Figure 2Tumor heterogeneity and clonal evolution during treatment
(A) Diagram showing the evolutional clonal architecture in pancreatic cancer (PC) at diagnosis and relapse. Of note, at diagnosis, the clonal and subclonal diversity evolved from a common ancestral tumor stem cell. The clonal evolution may follow linear or branched evolution, however, branched evolution is probably more likely to contribute to tumor heterogeneity. Additionally, drug treatment instigates a bottleneck effect, where resistant subclones will survive and proliferate to form a heterogeneous tumor. (B) During systemic successive targeted therapy assessed by longitudinal liquid biopsies may identify an actionable genetic alteration, therapy response or progression. In the event that progression is identified, the clinician may be able to switch treatment to target arising clones that carry additional mutations that were identified by the ctDNA analysis. At the start of targeted therapy, all cells in the patient's with PC have actionable genetic mutations (clone 1). The administration of treatment 1 targets the clone 1. longitudinal liquid biopsy analysis demonstrates an initial decrease in the clone 1 during treatment 1, yet uncovers the evolution of new clone (clone 2 and clone 3) causing resistance to treatment 1. The clone 2 and clone 3 can be targeted with treatment 2, where longitudinal liquid biopsy analysis uncovers a decrease in the frequency of resistance clone 2 and clone 3, during this time, however, other genetic alterations clone 4 and clone 5 increases in frequency. These clones 4 and 5 are resistant to treatment 2, yet is sensitive to treatment 3. During treatment 3, the frequency of the clone 4 and clone 5 decreases, while residual earlier resistant clones may persist to give rise to therapeutic resistance.
Studies of circulating tumor exosomes in pancreatic cancer
| Study | Specimen type | Platform | Markers | Findings and Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Que | Serum | Filtration, Ultracentrifugation, and RT-PCR | miR-17-5p, miR-21, miR-155, and miR-196a | There were low expressions of exosomal miR-155 and miR-196a in PC patients. Moreover, there were high expressions of serum exosomal miR-17-5p and miR-21 in PC patients than control groups and high expression of miR-17-5p was significantly correlated with advanced stage of PC. |
| Kahlert | Serum | Filtration, Ultracentrifugation and WGS | KRAS, p53 | Exosomes from PC patients contain >10-kb fragments of double-stranded genomic DNA with detectable mutations in KRAS and p53. In addition, WGS of exosomal DNA can determine genomic DNA mutations for cancer prediction, treatment, and therapy resistance. |
| Madhavan | Serum | Ultracentrifugation, qRT-PCR, and Flow cytometry | CD44v6, Tspan8, EpCAM, c-Met, CD104, miR-1246, miR-4644, miR-3976, and miR-4306 | Serum exosomal miR-1246, miR-4644, miR-3976 and miR-4306 were significantly upregulated in 83% of PC serum-exosomes, but rarely in control groups. Additionally, It was found that a combination of five proteins (CD44v6, Tspan8, EpCAM, MET and CD104) and four miRNAs (miR-1246, miR-4644, miR-3976 and miR-4306) in circulating tumor exosomes could recognize PC from healthy control, chronic pancreatitis and benign pancreatic disease with a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and 80% respectively. |
| Melo | Serum | Filtration, Ultracentrifugation, qRT-PCR And Mass spectrometry analyses | Glypican-1 | Expression of glypican 1 (GPC1) a membrane-bound protein on circulating exosomes of mice and humans with PC can differentiate healthy control and patients with a benign pancreatic disease. Notably, GPC1+ exosomes level correlated with tumor burden and the survival of PC patients before and after the surgery with utter sensitivity and specificity. Additionally, circulating GPC1+ exosomes of PC patients bear KRAS mutations, |
| Kanwar | Serum | ExoChip (antigen based) | CD63 | Significantly higher exosome capture in PC patients, compared to controls. |
| Allenson | Whole blood | Ultracentrifugation, Flow cytometry, and ddPCR | KRAS | Exosomal DNA posses KRAS mutations and was detected localized, locally advanced, and metastatic PC patients, respectively. Higher exosomal DNA KRAS mutations were associated with decreased disease-free survival in patients with localized disease. |
PC: pancreatic cancer; GPC1: glypican-1; miR: microRNA; ddPCR: Droplet digital polymerase chain reaction; qRT-PCR: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; WGS: Whole-genome sequencing; EpCAM: Epithelial cellular adhesion molecule; RT-PCR: Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.
Comparison between CTCs, ctDNA and exosomes as liquid biopsy
| Comparison | CTCs | ctDNA | Exosomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Includes apoptotic tumor and viable tumor cells from a primary or metastatic tumor [ | Includes cfDNA, from the viable tumor cells or from CTCs [ | Includes DNA, proteins, lipids, RNAs and metabolites and are discharged by all cells including tumor cells [ | |
| Frozen plasma, urine and other biofluids cannot be used for study of CTCs [ | Frozen plasma, urine and other biofluids can be used for study of cfDNA [ | Frozen plasma, urine and other biofluids can be used for study of exosomes [ | |
| Unstable [ | Stable [ | Very stable [ | |
| DNA and RNA [ | DNA [ | DNA and RNA [ | |
| CellSearch [ | dPCR [ | Ultracentrifugation [ | |
| Yes [ | No | No | |
| Yes [ | No | No | |
| Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | |
| Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | |
| Yes [ | No | Yes [ | |
| Yes [ | No | Yes [ | |
| Yes [ | Yes [ | No | |
| No | No | Yes [ |
DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid; RNA: Ribonucleic acid; CTCs: Circulating tumor cells; ctDNA: Circulating tumor DNA; cfDNA: Cell free DNA; ISET: Size of Epithelial Tumor; SE-iFISH: Immunostaining-fluorescence in situ hybridization; ddPCR: Droplet digital PCR; COLD-PCR: Co-amplifcation at lower denaturation temperature-PCR; NGS: Next-generation sequencing; BEAMing: Beads, Emulsion, Amplifcation and Magnetic; WGA: Whole genome amplifications, messenger RNAs (mRNAs); dPCR: digital PCR; CAPP-Seq: Cancer personalized profiling by deep sequencin; TAM-Seq: Tagged amplicon deep sequencing; Safe-Seq: Safe-sequencing.