| Literature DB >> 35337093 |
Filipa Amaro1,2, Márcia Carvalho1,2,3,4, Maria de Lourdes Bastos1,2, Paula Guedes de Pinho1,2, Joana Pinto1,2.
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa), bladder cancer (BCa), and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are the most common urological cancers, and their incidence has been rising over time. Surgery is the standard treatment for these cancers, but this procedure is only effective when the disease is localized. For metastatic disease, PCa is typically treated with androgen deprivation therapy, while BCa is treated with chemotherapy, and RCC is managed primarily with targeted therapies. However, response rates to these therapeutic options remain unsatisfactory due to the development of resistance and treatment-related toxicity. Thus, the discovery of biomarkers with prognostic and predictive value is needed to stratify patients into different risk groups, minimizing overtreatment and the risk of drug resistance development. Pharmacometabolomics, a branch of metabolomics, is an attractive tool to predict drug response in an individual based on its own metabolic signature, which can be collected before, during, and after drug exposure. Hence, this review focuses on the application of pharmacometabolomic approaches to identify the metabolic responses to hormone therapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and chemotherapy for the most prevalent urological cancers.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; bladder cancer; pharmacometabolomics; prostate cancer; renal cell carcinoma; treatment response
Year: 2022 PMID: 35337093 PMCID: PMC8952371 DOI: 10.3390/ph15030295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Pharmacometabolomic studies performed in PCa.
| Cancer Therapy | Samples | Instrumental and Statistical Analysis | Treatment Response | Metabolic | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Targeted therapy: | Intracellular (polar) metabolome of PCa cell lines: | 1H NMR | LY294002 treatment effects in both cell lines (PC3 and LNCaP): | LY294002 and 17AAG exposure activated glycolysis by PI3K/Akt signaling and influenced the glutaminolysis | [ |
| Hormone therapy: | Intracellular (polar) metabolome of PCa cell lines: | LC-Q/TOF-MS | Proxalutamide treatment effects in both AR-positive cell lines: | Proxalutamide exposure inhibited glutamine metabolism, glutathione metabolism and pyrimidine metabolism | [ |
| Hormone therapy | Intracellular (polar) metabolome of cell lines: | 1H NMR | Castration resistant condition effects in cell lines: | Castration resistant condition was associated with an upregulation of glycolysis; TCA cycle; glutaminolysis and glutathione synthesis | [ |
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| Hormone therapy: leuprolide (22.5 mg IM 3-month depot) and bicalutamide (50 mg per day) | Lipophilic and hydrophilic plasma extracts: | LC-MS/MS | Hormone therapy effects in PCa treated group: | Hormone therapy exposure inhibited steroids synthesis, fatty acid oxidation, bile acid synthesis and BCAAs synthesis | [ |
| Hormone therapy: bicalutamide and goserelin | Lipophilic serum extract: | LC-MS | Hormone therapy effects in PCa poor response group: | Hormone therapy exposure altered cholesterol metabolic pathway | [ |
| Hormone therapy: degarelix (240 mg) | Tissue extract (polar phase): | 1H-NMR | Degarelix effects in PCa treated group: | Hormone therapy exposure reduced glycolysis and membrane phospholipid metabolism | [ |
| Hormone therapy: LHRH agonist, LHRH-antagonist, or orchiectomy | Lipophilic and hydrophilic serum extracts: | GC-TOF-MS | Hormone therapy effects in PCa treated group (3 months): | Hormone therapy exposure reduced steroid biosynthesis; fatty acid β-oxidation and ketogenesis and alters microbiome metabolism | [ |
| Hormone therapy | Tissue extract (polar phase): | 1H NMR | Hormone therapy resistance effects in CRPCa (compared with BPH): | Castration resistant condition was associated with down-regulation of amino acid metabolism; membrane metabolism (choline metabolism) and altered energy metabolism (possibility of inverse Warburg effect) | [ |
| Chemotherapy: docetaxel (75 mg/m2) | Lipophilic plasma extract: | LC-MS/MS | Docetaxel effects in PCa treated group: | - | [ |
| Chemotherapy (docetaxel) and hormone therapy (LHRH analog) | Tissue extract (polar phase): | HPLC | Docetaxel and hormone therapy effects in PCa treated group: | Docetaxel and hormone therapy exposure inhibited pathways involved in biosynthesis and energy metabolism: amino acid metabolism; purine and pyrimidine metabolism; TCA cycle; lipid synthesis; glutathione metabolism | [ |
22RV1: human prostate carcinoma epithelial cell line; AMP: adenosine monophosphate; AUC: area under curve; AR: androgen receptor; BCAAs: branched chain amino acids; BPH: benign prostatic hyperplasia; CRPC: castration resistant PCa; CV-ANOVA: analysis of variance of cross-validated residuals; DU145: cell line with epithelial morphology isolated from the prostate; GC-MS: gas chromatography–mass spectrometry; GC-TOF-MS: gas chromatography-time of flight-mass spectrometry; GSH: reduced glutathione; GSSG: oxidized glutathione; HPLC: high-performance liquid chromatography; 1H-NMR: proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; HSP90: heat shock protein 90; HSPC: hormone sensitive PCa; LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; LC-HILIC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography-hydrophilic interaction chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; LC-HRMS: liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry; LC-MS: liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; LNCaP: lymph node carcinoma of the prostate; LPE: lysophosphatidylethanolamine; PA: phosphatidic acid; PC3: prostate cancer cell line; PC: phosphatidylcholine; PCa: prostate cancer; PCA: principal component analysis; PE: phosphatidylethanolamine; PI3K: phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PS: phosphatidylserine; OPLS-DA: orthogonal partial least squares-discriminant analysis; TRAMP: transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate; UMP: uridine monophosphate.
Figure 1Overview of a representative pharmacometabolomics workflow and its main goals.
Figure 2Flow diagram of literature search (time frame: 2010–2021; database: PubMed).
Pharmacometabolomic studies performed in BCa.
| Cancer Therapy | Samples | Instrumental and Statistical | Treatment Response | Metabolic | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Chemotherapy: cisplatin (10 mM) | Intracellular (lipophilic) metabolome of BCa cell lines: | UPLC-MS | Cisplatin resistance effects: | Cisplatin-resistant condition altered lipid metabolism (storage of fatty acids and phospholipid biosynthesis) | [ |
| Chemotherapy: cisplatin (10 μM) | Intracellular (polar) metabolome of cell lines: | 2D NMR (1H–13C HSQC) | Cisplatin resistance effects: | Cisplatin-resistant condition was associated with an upregulation of glycolysis (Warburg effect) and fatty acid synthesis (cellular proliferation) | [ |
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| Chemotherapy: gemcitabine (50 mg, dissolved in 20 mL normal saline) | Lipophilic tissue extracts: | LC-HRMS | Gemcitabine effects in BCa treated group: | - | [ |
2D NMR: two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance; 1H–13C HSQC: 1H–13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence; BCa: bladder cancer. CE: ceramides; LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; LC-HRMS: Liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry; LC-MS: liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; PCA: principal component analysis; T24: human urinary bladder cancer patient cell line; TG: triglycerides; UPLC-MS: ultraperformance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Pharmacometabolomic studies performed in RCC.
| Cancer Therapy | Samples | Instrumental and Statistical | Treatment Response | Biological | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Targeted therapy: sunitinib (10 mM) | Intracellular (polar) metabolome of RCC cell lines: | CE-TOF MS | Sunitinib resistance effects: | Sunitinib resistant condition is associated with up-regulation on lipid biosynthesis (membrane metabolism), energy metabolism (glycolysis and TCA cycle), arginine and proline pathways, urea cycle and nucleic acid biosynthesis | [ |
| Target therapy: sunitinib (25 mg/kg per day) | Intracellular (lipophilic) metabolome of primary cell culture of xenograft RCC mouse model: | LC-MS/MS | Sunitinib resistance effects in 786-R (compared with 786-P treated): | Sunitinib resistant condition is associated with up-regulation of energy metabolism (glutamine uptake, glycolysis, and TCA cycle) and antioxidant activity | [ |
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| Targeted therapy: | Hydrophilic serum extracts: | 1H NMR | Bevacizumab and temsirolimus combination effects in RCC treated group (2 weeks): | Bevacizumab and temsirolimus combination caused the greatest modification essentially in lipid and lipoprotein metabolisms | [ |
| Immunotherapy: | Lipophilic serum extracts: | LC-MS | Nivolumab effects in RCC treated group (phase 1 and 3): | Nivolumab exposure upregulated tryptophan catabolism (increased tryptophan to kynurenine conversion) resulting in an adaptive immune suppressive microenvironment | [ |
| Immunotherapy (checkpoint inhibitors): nivolumab and atezolizumab with bevacizumab | Lipophilic serum extracts: | LC-MS | Immunotherapy effects in RCC treated group: | Immunotherapy upregulated β- oxidation of lipids rather than glycolysis and altered T cell metabolism to enhance therapeutic response | [ |
786-O: hypertriploid renal cell carcinoma cell line; 1H NMR: proton nuclear magnetic resonance; CE: ceramide; CE-TOF MS: capillary electrophoresis-time of flight mass spectrometry; LC-MS: liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; OPLS: orthogonal partial least squares; PCA: principal component analysis; PC: phosphocholine; RCC: renal cell carcinoma; SM: sphingomyelin.