| Literature DB >> 33414910 |
Kayoko Waki1, Kanako Yokomizo1, Kouichiro Kawano2, Naotake Tsuda2, Nobukazu Komatsu3, Akira Yamada1.
Abstract
Endometrial cancer is the most prevalent gynecological cancer in developed countries. Although the prognosis of endometrial cancer is better than that of other gynecological cancers, the prognosis of advanced endometrial cancer is still poor and thus new therapeutic modalities, such as immune therapies, are urgently required. For the further development of new modalities, exploration of new biomarkers is important. The present study investigated the circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) integrity as a ratio of the necrotic tumor cell-derived long cfDNA fragments to the total dead cell-derived short cfDNA fragments from genomic Alu elements in patients with advanced endometrial cancer during peptide vaccination treatment. The results demonstrated that: i) The plasma cfDNA integrity was decreased during the first cycle of vaccination in patients with endometrial cancer treated with the personalized peptide vaccination, and ii) the post-vaccination cfDNA integrity levels were correlated with good prognosis. Some of these findings have been confirmed in other cancers, and thus cfDNA integrity might be an important marker for future cancer vaccine therapies in general, and might also be applicable for other immune therapies. Copyright: © Waki et al.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; cell-free DNA integrity; endometrial cancer; immunotherapy; peptide vaccine; prognosis; vaccine therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33414910 PMCID: PMC7783719 DOI: 10.3892/mco.2020.2191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Clin Oncol ISSN: 2049-9450
Figure 1Cycle threshold (Ct) values of PCR fragments of Alu element and cfDNA integrity of plasma samples obtained before (Pre) and after (Post) the first cycle of vaccination. (A) Ct values of total cfDNA (Alu-115), (B) tumor cell-derived cfDNA (Alu-247), (C) the cfDNA integrity (Alu-247/115). ns, not significant; cfDNA, circulating cell-free DNA.
Figure 2Contribution of the changes in Alu-115 and 247 to the change of cfDNA integrity during vaccination. (A) Relationship between Alu-115 and cfDNA integrity. (B) Relationship between Alu-247 and cfDNA integrity. cfDNA, circulating cell-free DNA.
Figure 3Relationship between the cfDNA integrity and pathogenetic types. Plasma samples were obtained before (Pre) and after (Post) the first cycle of vaccination and cfDNA integrity was measured. (A) Pre-vaccination cfDNA integrity. (B) Post-vaccination cfDNA integrity. (C) The difference in cfDNA integrity between pre- and post-vaccination (D cfDNA integrity). cfDNA, circulating cell-free DNA.
Figure 4Relationship between the cfDNA integrity and overall survival. Plasma samples were obtained before (Pre) and after (Post) the first cycle of vaccination and cfDNA integrity was measured. The patients were divided into high and low cfDNA-integrity groups at (A) pre-vaccination and (B) post-vaccination, and the difference in cfDNA integrity between pre- and post-vaccination (D cfDNA integrity) (C) and the overall survival were analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier plot. P-values show the results of the Cox hazard model. cfDNA, circulating cell-free DNA; HR, hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval; MST, median survival time.
Cox's proportional hazard analysis of various factors with OS.
| Factors | Hazard ratio (95% CI) | P-value |
|---|---|---|
| Age (1-year increase) | 0.98 (0.93-1.05) | 0.661 |
| Lymphocyte (>1,200 or less) | 0.68 (0.26-1.74) | 0.418 |
| Pathogenetic classification | ||
| Type I vs. type II | 0.29 (0.07-1.14) | 0.077 |
| Vaccine induced immune response | ||
| IgG response | 0.94 (0.31-2.80) | 0.918 |
| CTL response | 1.44 (0.45-5.50) | 0.539 |
| cfDNA integrity (0.01 increase) | ||
| Pre-vaccination | 0.69 (0.35-1.05) | 0.097 |
| Post-vaccination | 0.27 (0.04-0.94) | 0.038 |
| ∆(Post-Pre) | 1.17 (0.77-2.17) | 0.509 |
OS, overall survival; cfDNA, circulating cell-free DNA; CI, confidence interval; CTL, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte.