| Literature DB >> 30783124 |
Malgorzata Banys-Paluchowski1, Isabell Witzel2, Bahriye Aktas3, Peter A Fasching4, Andreas Hartkopf5, Wolfgang Janni6, Sabine Kasimir-Bauer7, Klaus Pantel8, Gerhard Schön9, Brigitte Rack6, Sabine Riethdorf8, Erich-Franz Solomayer10, Tanja Fehm11, Volkmar Müller12.
Abstract
In breast cancer (BC), elevated levels of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) in tumor tissue have been confirmed as a strong prognostic factor in level-of-evidence-1 studies. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the clinical relevance of uPA levels in serum of metastatic BC patients and to compare uPA with other blood-based biomarkers. 252 patients were enrolled in this prospective, multicentre study. Blood samples were collected before begin of first-line or later-line systemic treatment. Serum uPA was quantified by a commercially available ELISA. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) were detected using CellSearch; other biomarkers (EGFR, VEGF, HER2, RAS p21, TIMP1, CAIX) by ELISA. Using the ROC analysis, the optimal cut-off value (determined by the Youden index) of serum uPA was 2.52 ng/ml. Using this value, 26% of patients had elevated uPA levels. Patients with visceral metastasis and more than one metastatic site were significantly more likely to present with elevated uPA levels. CTC status, serum HER2, RAS p21, CAIX, TIMP1 and VEGF correlated significantly with uPA levels. Elevated uPA levels predicted shorter overall and progression-free survival in univariate analysis (median OS: 7.5 months [95%-CI 4.5-10.5 months] vs. not reached, p < 0.001; PFS: 4.8 [95%-CI: 3.1-6.5] vs. 9.1 [7.4-10.8] months, p < 0.001). In multivariate analysis, elevated uPA, presence of ≥5 CTCs, elevated RAS p21, higher grading and higher line of therapy were independent predictors of shorter OS, while elevated CTC counts, higher line of therapy and negative estrogen receptor status were independent predictors of shorter PFS. In conclusion, elevated uPA levels independently predict reduced overall survival and improved prognostication in patients with known CTC status. Whether high serum uPA might identify patients most likely to benefit from therapies targeting uPA, remains to be evaluated in future trials.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30783124 PMCID: PMC6381129 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-37259-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Distribution of the study patients according to serum uPA in correlation to clinical-pathological characteristics and other blood-based biomarkers (significant values are shown in bold).
| Total | uPA ≥2.52 ng/ml n (%) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 252 | 65 (26%) | |
|
| 0.22 | ||
| Premenopausal | 69 | 14 (20%) | |
| Postmenopausal | 183 | 51 (28%) | |
|
|
| ||
| Visceral +/− bone | 217 | 61 (28%) | |
| Bone only | 35 | 4 (11%) | |
|
|
| ||
| One site | 85 | 14 (17%) | |
| Multiple sites | 167 | 51 (31%) | |
|
| 0.075 | ||
| 1st-line | 98 | 19 (19%) | |
| 2nd-line or higher | 153 | 45 (29%) | |
|
| 0.607 | ||
| G1-G2 | 135 | 34 (25%) | |
| G3 | 103 | 29 (28%) | |
|
| 0.063 | ||
| Triple-negative | 37 | 13 (35%) | |
| HR-pos HER2-neg | 106 | 19 (18%) | |
| HER2-positive | 76 | 22 (29%) | |
|
| 0.467 | ||
| Negative | 76 | 22 (29%) | |
| Positive | 175 | 43 (25%) | |
|
| 0.293 | ||
| Negative | 102 | 30 (29%) | |
| Positive | 149 | 35 (24%) | |
|
| 0.283 | ||
| Negative | 143 | 32 (22%) | |
| Positive | 76 | 22 (29%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <5 CTCs/7.5 ml | 122 | 22 (18%) | |
| ≥5 CTCs/7.5 ml | 122 | 40 (33%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <15 ng/ml | 131 | 22 (17%) | |
| ≥15 ng/ml | 119 | 42 (35%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <452 pg/ml | 222 | 50 (23%) | |
| ≥452 pg/ml | 29 | 14 (48%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <506 ng/ml | 162 | 28 (17%) | |
| ≥506 ng/ml | 90 | 37 (41%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <454 ng/ml | 183 | 29 (16%) | |
| ≥454 ng/ml | 69 | 36 (52%) | |
|
|
| ||
| <367 pg/ml | 189 | 39 (21%) | |
| ≥367 pg/ml | 63 | 26 (41%) | |
|
| 0.678 | ||
| <73 ng/ml | 189 | 50 (27%) | |
| ≥73 ng/ml | 63 | 15 (24%) |
Abbreviations: HR – hormone receptor.
Figure 1Survival ROC for serum uPA and 1-year-survival (Youden-Index for the cut-off value of 2.52 ng/ml: sensitivity 44.8%, specificity 85.3%).
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier plot of overall survival according to uPA levels.
Figure 3Kaplan-Meier plot of progression-free survival according to uPA levels.
Overall and progression-free survival according to serum uPA levels and circulating tumor cell counts.
| Median PFS Months [95%-CI] | Median OS Months [95%-CI] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥5 CTCs | <5 CTCs | ≥5 CTCs | <5 CTCs | |
| uPA ≥2.52 ng/ml | 5.3 [1.7–8.9] | 4.2 [1.2–7.2] | 7.2 [5.1–9.3] | Not reached (mean 14.1) |
| uPA < 2.52 ng/ml | 5.7 [3.8–7.6] | 10.8 [9.1–12.5] | 17.8 [10.8–24.8] | Not reached (mean 20.8) |
Figure 4Kaplan-Meier plot of overall and progression-free survival according to circulating tumor cells and uPA levels.
Prognostic relevance of serum uPA according to the tumor subtype.
| Tumor subtype | Overall survival | Progression-free survival | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean/Median months [95%-CI] | p-value | Median | p-value | |
| HR-pos HER2-neg | Mean: 15.0 [10.7–19.3] vs. 17.2 [15.4–19.1]; Median not reached | 0.319 | 6.8 [0–14.7] vs. 9.1 [6.9–11.4] | 0.387 |
| Triple-negative | Mean: 6.2 [4.1–8.2] vs. 15.9 [12.1–19.7]; Median: 6.2 [1.8–10.6] vs. not reached | 0.018 | 5.3 [2.2–8.4] vs. 7.5 [4.4–10.5] | 0.097 |
| HER2-positive | Mean: 9.3 [5.9–12.7] vs. 20.5 [18.6–22.4]; Median: 6.7 [2.5–10.9] vs. not reached | <0.001 | 4.3 [1.7–6.9] vs. 10.2 [7.3–13.1] | 0.001 |
Abbreviations: HR – hormone receptor, CI – confidence interval.
Univariate and multivariate analysis of overall and progression-free survival.
| Parameter | Overall survival | Progression-free survival | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate p-value | Multivariate p-value | HR | 95%-CI | Univariate p-value | Multivariate p-value | HR | 95%-CI | |
|
| ||||||||
| Elevated vs. non-elevated | < |
| 2.074 | 1.15–3.74 | < | 0.272 | 1.276 | 0.83–1.97 |
|
| ||||||||
| Pre- vs. Postmenopausal | 0.879 | — | — | — | 0.981 | — | — | — |
|
| ||||||||
| ≥5 vs. <5 CTCs/7.5 ml blood | < | < | 3.200 | 1.70–6.02 |
| < | 2.193 | 1.43–3.36 |
|
| ||||||||
| >1st line vs. 1st line | < |
| 2.829 | 1.47–5.45 | < | < | 2.964 | 1.94–4.53 |
|
| ||||||||
| G3 vs. G1/2 | 0.183 |
| 1.351 | 1.01–1.81 | 0.390 | 0.167 | 1.151 | 0.94–1.41 |
|
| ||||||||
| Positive vs. Negative | 0.215 | 0.189 | 0.671 | 0.37–1.22 | 0.209 |
| 0.602 | 0.39–0.92 |
|
| ||||||||
| Positive vs. Negative | 0.527 | — | — | — | 0.171 | — | — | — |
|
| ||||||||
| Positive vs. Negative | 0.231 | 0.128 | 0.634 | 0.35–1.14 | 0.973 | 0.929 | 0.982 | 0.66–1.46 |
|
| ||||||||
| Multiple vs. Single site |
| 0.445 | 1.321 | 0.65–2.70 |
| 0.117 | 1.500 | 0.90–2.49 |
|
| ||||||||
| Visceral (+/− bone) vs. bone only |
| 0.429 | 1.878 | 0.39–8.97 |
| 0.754 | 0.888 | 0.42–1.87 |
|
| ||||||||
| Elevated vs. non-elevated |
| 0.407 | 1.314 | 0.69–2.51 | 0.077 | 0.083 | 0.670 | 0.43–1.05 |
|
| ||||||||
|
|
| 2.181 | 1.06–4.48 |
| 0.145 | 1.516 | 0.87–2.65 | |
|
| ||||||||
| ≥367 pg/ml vs. <367 pg/ml | < | 0.390 | 1.284 | 0.73–2.27 | < | 0.057 | 1.527 | 0.99–2.36 |
|
| ||||||||
| ≥73 ng/ml vs. <73 ng/ml |
| 0.072 | 0.497 | 0.23–1.07 | 0.270 | 0.422 | 0.838 | 0.54–1.29 |
|
| ||||||||
| Elevated vs. non-elevated | < | 0.419 | 1.270 | 0.71–2.27 | < | 0.500 | 1.167 | 0.75–1.83 |
|
| ||||||||
| Elevated vs. non-elevated | < | 0.214 | 1.433 | 0.81–2.53 | < | 0.149 | 1.358 | 0.90–2.06 |