| Literature DB >> 35454771 |
Leonel Pekarek1,2,3, Oscar Fraile-Martinez1,2, Cielo Garcia-Montero1,2, Miguel A Saez1,2,4, Ines Barquero-Pozanco1, Laura Del Hierro-Marlasca1, Patricia de Castro Martinez1, Adoración Romero-Bazán1, Miguel A Alvarez-Mon1,2, Jorge Monserrat1,2, Natalio García-Honduvilla1,2, Julia Buján1,2, Melchor Alvarez-Mon1,2,5, Luis G Guijarro2,6, Miguel A Ortega1,2,7.
Abstract
The incidence and prevalence of pancreatic adenocarcinoma have increased in recent years. Pancreatic cancer is the seventh leading cause of cancer death, but it is projected to become the second leading cause of cancer-related mortality by 2040. Most patients are diagnosed in an advanced stage of the disease, with very limited 5-year survival. The discovery of different tissue markers has elucidated the underlying pathophysiology of pancreatic adenocarcinoma and allowed stratification of patient risk at different stages and assessment of tumour recurrence. Due to the invasive capacity of this tumour and the absence of screening markers, new immunohistochemical and serological markers may be used as prognostic markers for recurrence and in the study of possible new therapeutic targets because the survival of these patients is low in most cases. The present article reviews the currently used main histopathological and serological markers and discusses the main characteristics of markers under development.Entities:
Keywords: histological markers; pancreatic adenocarcinoma; pancreatic immunohistochemistry; serological markers
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454771 PMCID: PMC9029823 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14081866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1An overview of the main biomarkers used in pancreatic cancer. These markers are found in the proper tumour environment, as studied by histological techniques or released in blood or lymphatic vessels, which may be studied in the form of serological analysis. All of these markers are involved or related to the different oncogenic processes that occur in the tumour, including enhanced proliferation, immune and cell death evasion, the inflammatory environment, metastasis, and other hallmarks of cancer. The study and inclusion of these markers in clinical practice may greatly aid the clinical management of patients with pancreatic cancer, including at the diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic (predictive) levels.
A summary of the main biomarkers in pancreatic adenocarcinoma.
| Marker | Type of Marker | Diagnostic Utility | Prognostic Value | Therapeutic/Predictive Value | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CA 19-9 | Serological | Yes, AUC = 0.878 | Serological levels of CA19-9 are related to higher tumour burden | No | [ |
| REG 4 | Serological | Yes, AUC = 0.922 | No | No | [ |
| CEACAM | Histopathological/Serological | Yes | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| TIMP1 + OPN | Serological | Yes, sensitivity power at 89.5% | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| MIC1 | Serological | Yes, AUC = 0.886 | Higher expression levels correlate with increased recurrences after curative surgery | No | [ |
| CEA | Serological | Yes, AUC = 0.900 | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| MUC5AC | Serological/Histopathological | Yes, AUC = 0.894 in combination with CA 19-9 | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| CD34/FVIII | Histopathological angiogenesis | Yes | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | Possible application of antiangiogenic drugs that is being evaluated | [ |
| VEGF C/D D240 | Histopathological | Yes | Higher expression levels correlate with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) | Serological | Sensitivity: 84% | Higher tumour cell detection correlates with a poorer prognosis | No | [ |
| miRNA-16a + miRNA196a | Serological | AUC = 0.979 in combination with CA 19-9 | No | No | [ |
| miRNA 1246 + miRNA4644 | Serological | AUC = 0.814 | No | No | [ |
| Microsatellite instability | Histopathological | Limited; 1–3% of patients present alterations | Inconclusive | Limited therapeutic implications | [ |
| BRCA1/BRCA2 | Genetic | BRCA1 = 2.3% patients. | Poorer prognosis | Possible greater response to platinum-based chemotherapies; response to PARP inhibitors in metastatic adenocarcinomas | [ |
| CDKN2A/p16 | Genetic | 50% of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma show this alteration | Current studies are contradictory | No | [ |
| KRAS | Genetic | 95% of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma show this alteration | Higher tumour cell detection correlates with a poorer prognosis | Possible use of RNA interference by Local Drug Eluter | [ |
| p53 | Genetic | 70% of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma | Associated with tumour’s aggressiveness | Possible use of APR-246 or ganetespib to restore P53 functions with limited therapeutic effects. Linked with cisplatin resistance | [ |
| DPC4/SAMD4 | Genetic | 80% of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma | Higher rate of locoregional recurrence after tumour resection, greater probability of metastatic disease and reduced survival | Possible use of AP-120009 with limited therapeutic effects | [ |