Increased epithelial membrane protein 2 expression in glioblastoma after treatment with bevacizumab
Author(s) -
Kunal Patel,
Sameer Kejriwal,
Samasuk Thammachantha,
Courtney Duong,
Adrián Murillo,
Lynn K. Gordon,
Timothy F. Cloughesy,
Linda M. Liau,
William H. Yong,
Isaac Yang,
Madhuri Wadehra
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
neuro-oncology advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-2498
DOI - 10.1093/noajnl/vdaa112
Subject(s) - bevacizumab , glioblastoma , protein expression , cancer research , membrane protein , medicine , oncology , chemistry , membrane , biochemistry , gene , chemotherapy
Background Antiangiogenic therapy with bevacizumab has failed to provide substantial gains in overall survival. Epithelial membrane protein 2 (EMP2) is a cell surface protein that has been previously shown to be expressed in glioblastoma, correlate with poor survival, and regulate neoangiogenesis in cell lines. Thus, the relationship between bevacizumab and EMP2 was investigated. Methods Tumor samples were obtained from 12 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma at 2 time points: (1) during the initial surgery and (2) during a subsequent surgery following disease recurrence post-bevacizumab treatment. Clinical characteristics and survival data from these patients were collected, and tumor samples were stained for EMP2 expression. The IVY Glioblastoma Atlas Project database was used to evaluate EMP2 expression levels in 270 samples by differing histological areas of the tumor. Results Patients with high EMP2 staining at initial diagnosis had decreased progression-free and overall survival after bevacizumab ( median progression-free survival 4.6 months vs 5.9 months; log-rank P = .076 and overall survival 7.7 months vs 14.4 months; log-rank P = .011 ). There was increased EMP2 staining in samples obtained after bevacizumab treatment in both unpaired ( mean H-score 2.31 vs 1.76; P = .006 ) and paired analyses ( mean difference 0.571; P = .019 ). This expression increase correlated with length of bevacizumab therapy ( R 2 = 0.449; Pearson P = .024 ). Conclusions Bevacizumab treatment increased EMP2 protein expression. This increase in EMP2 correlated with reduced mean survival time post-bevacizumab therapy. We hypothesize a role of EMP2 in clinical bevacizumab resistance and as a potential antiangiogenic therapeutic target in glioblastoma.
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