| Literature DB >> 35209919 |
Jill Kolesar1, Spencer Peh1, Levin Thomas2, Gayathri Baburaj2, Nayonika Mukherjee2, Raveena Kantamneni2, Shirley Lewis3, Ananth Pai4, Karthik S Udupa4, Naveena Kumar An5, Vivek M Rangnekar6, Mahadev Rao7.
Abstract
The advent of molecular profiling has revolutionized the treatment of lung cancer by comprehensively delineating the genomic landscape of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene. Drug resistance caused by EGFR mutations and genetic polymorphisms of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters impedes effective treatment of EGFR mutant and resistant lung cancer. This review appraises current literature, opportunities, and challenges associated with liquid biopsy and pharmacogenomic (PGx) testing as precision therapy tools in the management of EGFR mutant and resistant lung cancers. Liquid biopsy could play a potential role in selection of precise tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapies during different phases of lung cancer treatment. This selection will be based on the driver EGFR mutational status, as well as monitoring the development of potential EGFR mutations arising during or after TKIs treatment, since some of these new mutations may be druggable targets for alternative TKIs. Several studies have identified the utility of liquid biopsy in the identification of EGFR driver and acquired resistance with good sensitivities for various blood-based biomarkers. With a plethora of sequencing technologies and platforms available currently, further evaluations using randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in multicentric, multiethnic and larger patient cohorts could enable optimization of liquid-based assays for the detection of EGFR mutations, and support testing of CYP450 enzymes and drug transporter polymorphisms to guide precise dosing of EGFR TKIs.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; Liquid biopsy; Lung cancer; Pharmacogenomics; Precision therapy; Tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35209919 PMCID: PMC8867675 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-022-01534-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Serial molecular profiling by liquid biopsy and pharmacogenomics across various phases of lung cancer such as screening, treatment planning, monitoring of pharmacotherapy till remission free stage for precision therapy of EGFR mutant and resistant lung cancer. Created with BioRender.com (Agreement number: FS237SI0R8). Abbreviations: EGFR: Epidermal growth factor receptor; TKIs: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors; PGx: Pharmacogenomics; TDM: Therapeutic drug monitoring
Fig. 2Schematic diagram explaining mechanisms of acquired resistance to EGFR TKIs. A. Mutant EGFR confers resistance to binding of TKIs to the tyrosine kinase domain of EGFR. This activates downstream signaling pathways such as the PI3K-AKT pathway, JAK-STAT pathway, RAS pathway and ERK-MAPK pathway. B. Overexpression of HGF causes TKI-resistance that activates downstream signaling of the PI3K-AKT pathway, JAK-STAT pathway, RAS pathway and ERK-MAPK pathway. The above pathways result in cell proliferation, cell migration, invasion, and metastasis, that in turn cause the release of CTCs, ctDNA, miRNA, lncRNA, exosomes and TEPs into the bloodstream. Liquid biopsy helps examine these biomarkers and assess the type of mutation. Created with BioRender.com (Agreement number: XF237SHT72). Abbreviations: EGFR: Epidermal growth factor receptor; TK: Tyrosine kinase; CTCs: Circulating tumor cells; ctDNA: Circulating tumor DNA; miRNA: Micro RNA; lncRNA: Long non-coding RNA; TEPs: Tumor educated platelets; mTOR: Mammalian target of rapamycin; AKT: V-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene homolog; PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-kinase; STAT3: Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; JAK: Janus Activated Kinase; ERK: Extracellular-signal-regulated kinase; MAPK: Mitogen-activated protein kinase; MEK: Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase; RAF: Rapidly Accelerated Fibrosarcoma; RAS: Rat sarcoma virus; HGF: Hepatocyte growth factor; TKIs: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors; MET: Mesenchymal epithelial transition factor
The characteristics of the biomarkers with their corresponding isolation techniques, clinical applications and limitations
| Biomarkers | Isolation technique | Clinical application | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) | Immunomagnetic enrichment | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Reproducibility ▪ Sensitivity ▪ CTC without epithelial marker could not be detected ▪ Difficult to use with whole blood ▪ Low purity of detected CTC ▪ Cannot process whole blood ▪ High detection cost | [ |
| Immunomagnetic isolation | ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Prognosis | ▪ Reliance on EpCAM and CK ▪ Variation of expression of EpCAM and CK across cancers ▪ Lack of selectivity ▪ High detection cost | [ | |
| Magnetic beads | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Increased contamination with WBC ▪ Requires more blood | [ | |
Microfluidic positive immunocapture (CTC-chip) | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Diagnosis | ▪ Shear force might affect cell viability and attachment ▪ Slow rate processing ▪ Limited volume | [ | |
Size based separation (filter-based isolation) | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Prone to clogging ▪ Requires high volume of blood ▪ Sample may be adulterated | [ | |
| Density gradient separation | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Loss of large CTC and cell aggregates ▪ Low purity | [ | |
| Inertial focusing | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Morphological deformation of the captured cell | [ | |
| Single cell sequencing | ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment | ▪ Poor reproducibility ▪ False positives and false negatives ▪ Allele deletion ▪ Sequencing errors | [ | |
| Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) | Manual (DNA purification) | ▪ Detection ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment initiation and monitoring | ▪ Low accuracy and precision | [ |
| Automated (ccfDNA purification) | ▪ Requires adequate control for downstream application ▪ Only for use with plasma prepared from human whole blood samples collected in EDTA tube ▪ Not for use in diagnostic procedures | |||
| ctRNA (miRNA, lncRNA) | Northern blot analysis | ▪ Diagnosis | ▪ mRNA degradation during electrophoresis ▪ Low sensitivity ▪ Detection with multiple probes is difficult | [ |
| Microarray | ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Therapeutic response prediction | ▪ Standardization and optimization ▪ Low specificity ▪ Low reproducibility ▪ High cost of a single experiment ▪ Unsuitable for clinical experiences | [ | |
| RT-qPCR | ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Treatment initiation and monitoring | ▪ Amplification bias ▪ No template controls ▪ Cannot perform multiple detection | [ | |
| Liquid chip technology | ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Prognosis ▪ Treatment ▪ Resistance monitoring | ▪ In vivo validation ▪ Difficult to scale up | [ | |
| Exosomes | Ultracentrifugation-based | ▪ Early diagnosis ▪ Prognosis | ▪ Contamination and exosome loss ▪ Low recovery ▪ Laborious | [ |
| Size-based | ▪ Diagnosis | ▪ Deformation of EVs ▪ High risk of chip clogging ▪ Long run time | [ | |
| Immunoaffinity capture-based | ▪ Diagnosis | ▪ Antibody cross reactivity ▪ Possible detection of non-EV particles ▪ Only exosomes with targeted proteins can be separated ▪ Low yield ▪ Tumor heterogeneity hinders immune recognition ▪ Time consuming ▪ Expensive | [ | |
| Microfluidics based | ▪ Diagnosis | ▪ Lack of standardization and method validation ▪ Moderate to low sample capacity | [ | |
| Tumor-educated platelets (TEPs) | Spliced TEP mRNA | ▪ Diagnosis ▪ Treatment monitoring | ▪ Complex isolation technique ▪ Fragility of TEPs | [ |
Abbreviations: CTCs Circulating Tumor Cells, EpCAM Epithelial cell adhesion molecule, CK Cytokeratin, WBC White blood cell, ctDNA Circulating tumor DNA, ccfDNA Circulating cell free DNA, EDTA Ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, ctRNA Circulating tumor RNA, miRNA MicroRNA, lncRNA Long non-coding RNA, mRNA Messenger RNA, RT-qPCR Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, EVs Extracellular vesicles, TEPs Tumor-educated platelets
A summary of metabolism of EGFR TKIs drugs
| EGFR TKIs | Generation | Metabolism | Drug-drug interactions | MDRP substrates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gefitinib | First | CYP3A4, CYP2D6, CYP3A5 (minor) | ▪ CYP3A4, CYP2D6 inhibitors may increase serum concentration ▪ CYP3A4, CYP2D6 inducers may decrease serum concentration | P-gp and BCRP |
| Erlotinib | First | CYP1A2, CYP3A4 | ▪ CYP3A4, CYP2A1 inhibitors may increase serum concentration ▪ CYP3A4, CYP2A1 inducers may decrease serum concentration ▪ Erlotinib reduce serum concentrations of other CYP3A4 substrates | P-gp and BCRP |
| Afatinib | First | None | ▪ P-gp inhibitors may increase serum concentration ▪ P-gp inducers may decrease serum concentration | P-gp and BCRP |
| Dacomitinib | Second | CYP2D6 | ▪ CYP2D6 inhibitors may increase serum concentration | None |
| Osimertinib | Third | CYP3A4 | ▪ CYP3A4 inhibitors may increase serum concentration ▪ CYP3A4 inducers may decrease serum concentration ▪ Osimertinib may increase serum concentrations of other P-gp/BCRP substrates | P-gp and BCRP |
| Mobocertinib | Third? | CYP3A4, CYP3A5 | ▪ CYP3A4/5 inhibitors may increase serum concentration ▪ CYP3A4/5 inducers may decrease serum concentration | Unknown |
Abbreviations: TKIs Tyrosine kinase inhibitors, MDRP Multi-drug resistant transporter protein, P-gp Permeability glycoprotein, BCRP Breast cancer resistant protein
Fig. 3Pharmacogenomic screening of CYP450 enzymes and drug transporters for TKIs could help in stratifying the population into various categories of drug responders. Created with BioRender.com (Agreement number: II237SHPD4). Abbreviations: PGx: Pharmacogenomics; TKI: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors; BCRP: Breast cancer resistant protein; P-gp: Permeability glycoprotein; IM: Intermediate metabolizers; PM: Poor metabolizers; EM: Extensive metabolizers; UM: Ultra rapid metabolizers; DDI: Drug-drug interaction
Fig. 4Challenges faced by liquid biopsy and PGx for their implementation in clinical practice for EGFR resistant and mutant lung cancer patients. Abbreviations: PGx: Pharmacogenomics; EGFR: Epidermal growth factor receptor; TKIs: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors; PTM: Post translational modifications; DDI: Drug-drug interaction; MRD: Minimal residual disease; TMB: Tumor mutational burden