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Molecular determinants of irinotecan efficacy
Author(s) -
Vallböhmer Daniel,
Iqbal Syma,
Yang Dong Yun,
Rhodes Katrin E.,
Zhang Wu,
Gordon Michael,
Fazzone William,
Schultheis Anne M.,
Sherrod Andy E.,
Danenberg Kathleen D.,
Lenz HeinzJosef
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.22129
Subject(s) - ercc1 , irinotecan , medicine , colorectal cancer , oncology , progressive disease , laser capture microdissection , chemotherapy , topoisomerase , angiogenesis , gene expression , cancer , cancer research , biology , gene , dna repair , enzyme , biochemistry , nucleotide excision repair
Molecular markers predicting the efficacy of CPT‐11 based chemotherapies in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) are unknown. Therefore, we investigated whether mRNA levels of drug targets (Topoisomerase I, TS), enzymes involved in 5‐FU metabolism (DPD), in angiogenesis (EGFR, IL‐8, VEGF) and in DNA‐repair/drug detoxification (ERCC1, GST‐P1) are associated with the clinical outcome of patients with CRC treated with first‐line CPT‐11 based chemotherapy. Thirty three patients with metastatic CRC were included in the study. Intratumoral gene expression levels were assessed from paraffin‐embedded tissue samples, using laser capture microdissection and quantitative Real‐Time PCR. Complete response was observed in 1 patient, partial response in 12 patients, stable disease in 13 patients and progressive disease in 6 patients. Response was inevaluable for 1 patient. Patients with complete response or partial response were classified as responders, while patients with stable disease or progressive disease were classified as nonresponders. High intratumoral mRNA levels of EGFR, ERCC1 and GSPT‐P1 were each significantly associated with response to CPT‐11 based chemotherapy. Recursive partitioning analysis showed that mRNA levels of EGFR and ERCC1 are primarily responsible for delineating responders from nonresponders. Also, the combination of high intratumoral gene expression levels of both EGFR and ERCC1 was significantly associated with progression‐free survival. The mRNA levels of EGFR had a significant correlation with expression levels of ERCC1, GST‐P1 and VEGF. This small retrospective study suggests that gene expression levels of EGFR, ERCC1 and GST‐P1 may be useful in predicting the clinical outcome of patients with metastatic CRC treated with first‐line CPT‐11 based chemotherapy. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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