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Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age

BACKGROUND: Serum levels of novel hydroxy polyunsaturated ultra long-chain fatty acids (hPULCFAs) have been previously shown to be reduced in pre-treatment CRC patients compared to disease-free subjects, independent of disease stage. However, whether reduced levels of hPULCFAs result from the presen...

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Autores principales: Ritchie, Shawn A, Heath, Doug, Yamazaki, Yasuyo, Grimmalt, Bryan, Kavianpour, Amir, Krenitsky, Kevin, Elshoni, Hoda, Takemasa, Ichiro, Miyake, Masakazu, Sekimoto, Mitsugu, Monden, Morito, Tomonaga, Takeshi, Matsubara, Hisahiro, Sogawa, Kazuyuki, Matsushita, Kazuyuki, Nomura, Fumio, Goodenowe, Dayan B
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3009636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21114854
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-140
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author Ritchie, Shawn A
Heath, Doug
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
Grimmalt, Bryan
Kavianpour, Amir
Krenitsky, Kevin
Elshoni, Hoda
Takemasa, Ichiro
Miyake, Masakazu
Sekimoto, Mitsugu
Monden, Morito
Tomonaga, Takeshi
Matsubara, Hisahiro
Sogawa, Kazuyuki
Matsushita, Kazuyuki
Nomura, Fumio
Goodenowe, Dayan B
author_facet Ritchie, Shawn A
Heath, Doug
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
Grimmalt, Bryan
Kavianpour, Amir
Krenitsky, Kevin
Elshoni, Hoda
Takemasa, Ichiro
Miyake, Masakazu
Sekimoto, Mitsugu
Monden, Morito
Tomonaga, Takeshi
Matsubara, Hisahiro
Sogawa, Kazuyuki
Matsushita, Kazuyuki
Nomura, Fumio
Goodenowe, Dayan B
author_sort Ritchie, Shawn A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Serum levels of novel hydroxy polyunsaturated ultra long-chain fatty acids (hPULCFAs) have been previously shown to be reduced in pre-treatment CRC patients compared to disease-free subjects, independent of disease stage. However, whether reduced levels of hPULCFAs result from the presence of cancer is currently unknown, as is the distribution of hPULCFAs in the general population. The following studies were carried out to assess whether conventional therapy would result in restoration of systemic hPULCFAs in CRC patients, and to investigate the relationship between hPULCFA levels and age. METHODS: Tandem mass spectrometry was used to determine serum levels of the 28 carbon-containing hPULCFA C28H46O4 (CRC-446) in the following cohorts: two independent Japanese CRC populations following surgical tumor removal (n = 86), a North American Caucasian CRC cohort (n = 150) following post-surgery combination chemo/radiation therapy, 990 randomly selected anonymized serum samples from subjects ranging between 11 and 99 years of age, as well as longitudinally collected serum samples from healthy normals (n = 8, up to 90 weeks) and stage IV CRC subjects on combination therapy (n = 12, up to 63 weeks). RESULTS: Serum CRC-446 levels in CRC subjects were significantly lower than controls (mean of 0.297 ± 0.07 ug/ml in controls versus 0.092 ± 0.03 in CRCs, p < 0.001), and were unaffected by surgical tumor removal or by chemo/radiation treatment (p > 0.05 between pre vs post surgery). CRC-446 levels showed a strong inverse association with age (p < E-11) across the randomly-selected cohort of 990 subjects, with no correlation observed in the CRC-positive subjects. Longitudinal intra-subject results, however, showed relatively stable CRC-446 levels over the short term of up to 90 weeks in both disease-free subjects and late-stage CRC patients. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that CRC-446 levels are not affected by conventional CRC treatment and inversely correlate with age, which suggest that reduced serum CRC-446 levels likely exist prior to the development of CRC. Extrapolation of the results to a simple screening scenario showed that, compared to fecal blood testing, pre-colonoscopy screening using serum CRC-446 levels would require 80% fewer colonoscopies, would identify risk in subjects under the age of 50, and would result in increased numbers of early cases detected. The precise role these serum metabolites play in the aetiology of cancer development remains to be determined.
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spelling pubmed-30096362010-12-24 Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age Ritchie, Shawn A Heath, Doug Yamazaki, Yasuyo Grimmalt, Bryan Kavianpour, Amir Krenitsky, Kevin Elshoni, Hoda Takemasa, Ichiro Miyake, Masakazu Sekimoto, Mitsugu Monden, Morito Tomonaga, Takeshi Matsubara, Hisahiro Sogawa, Kazuyuki Matsushita, Kazuyuki Nomura, Fumio Goodenowe, Dayan B BMC Gastroenterol Research Article BACKGROUND: Serum levels of novel hydroxy polyunsaturated ultra long-chain fatty acids (hPULCFAs) have been previously shown to be reduced in pre-treatment CRC patients compared to disease-free subjects, independent of disease stage. However, whether reduced levels of hPULCFAs result from the presence of cancer is currently unknown, as is the distribution of hPULCFAs in the general population. The following studies were carried out to assess whether conventional therapy would result in restoration of systemic hPULCFAs in CRC patients, and to investigate the relationship between hPULCFA levels and age. METHODS: Tandem mass spectrometry was used to determine serum levels of the 28 carbon-containing hPULCFA C28H46O4 (CRC-446) in the following cohorts: two independent Japanese CRC populations following surgical tumor removal (n = 86), a North American Caucasian CRC cohort (n = 150) following post-surgery combination chemo/radiation therapy, 990 randomly selected anonymized serum samples from subjects ranging between 11 and 99 years of age, as well as longitudinally collected serum samples from healthy normals (n = 8, up to 90 weeks) and stage IV CRC subjects on combination therapy (n = 12, up to 63 weeks). RESULTS: Serum CRC-446 levels in CRC subjects were significantly lower than controls (mean of 0.297 ± 0.07 ug/ml in controls versus 0.092 ± 0.03 in CRCs, p < 0.001), and were unaffected by surgical tumor removal or by chemo/radiation treatment (p > 0.05 between pre vs post surgery). CRC-446 levels showed a strong inverse association with age (p < E-11) across the randomly-selected cohort of 990 subjects, with no correlation observed in the CRC-positive subjects. Longitudinal intra-subject results, however, showed relatively stable CRC-446 levels over the short term of up to 90 weeks in both disease-free subjects and late-stage CRC patients. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that CRC-446 levels are not affected by conventional CRC treatment and inversely correlate with age, which suggest that reduced serum CRC-446 levels likely exist prior to the development of CRC. Extrapolation of the results to a simple screening scenario showed that, compared to fecal blood testing, pre-colonoscopy screening using serum CRC-446 levels would require 80% fewer colonoscopies, would identify risk in subjects under the age of 50, and would result in increased numbers of early cases detected. The precise role these serum metabolites play in the aetiology of cancer development remains to be determined. BioMed Central 2010-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3009636/ /pubmed/21114854 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-140 Text en Copyright ©2010 Ritchie et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (<url>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0</url>), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ritchie, Shawn A
Heath, Doug
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
Grimmalt, Bryan
Kavianpour, Amir
Krenitsky, Kevin
Elshoni, Hoda
Takemasa, Ichiro
Miyake, Masakazu
Sekimoto, Mitsugu
Monden, Morito
Tomonaga, Takeshi
Matsubara, Hisahiro
Sogawa, Kazuyuki
Matsushita, Kazuyuki
Nomura, Fumio
Goodenowe, Dayan B
Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title_full Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title_fullStr Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title_full_unstemmed Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title_short Reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
title_sort reduction of novel circulating long-chain fatty acids in colorectal cancer patients is independent of tumor burden and correlates with age
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3009636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21114854
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-10-140
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