Cargando…

Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection

BACKGROUND: The prognosis of pancreatic cancer (PC) is one of the poorest among all cancers, due largely to the lack of methods for screening and early detection. New biomarkers for identifying high-risk or early-stage subjects could significantly impact PC mortality. The goal of this study was to f...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ritchie, Shawn A, Akita, Hirofumi, Takemasa, Ichiro, Eguchi, Hidetoshi, Pastural, Elodie, Nagano, Hiroaki, Monden, Morito, Doki, Yuichiro, Mori, Masaki, Jin, Wei, Sajobi, Tolulope T, Jayasinghe, Dushmanthi, Chitou, Bassirou, Yamazaki, Yasuyo, White, Thayer, Goodenowe, Dayan B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3847543/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24024929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-416
_version_ 1782293621424259072
author Ritchie, Shawn A
Akita, Hirofumi
Takemasa, Ichiro
Eguchi, Hidetoshi
Pastural, Elodie
Nagano, Hiroaki
Monden, Morito
Doki, Yuichiro
Mori, Masaki
Jin, Wei
Sajobi, Tolulope T
Jayasinghe, Dushmanthi
Chitou, Bassirou
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
White, Thayer
Goodenowe, Dayan B
author_facet Ritchie, Shawn A
Akita, Hirofumi
Takemasa, Ichiro
Eguchi, Hidetoshi
Pastural, Elodie
Nagano, Hiroaki
Monden, Morito
Doki, Yuichiro
Mori, Masaki
Jin, Wei
Sajobi, Tolulope T
Jayasinghe, Dushmanthi
Chitou, Bassirou
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
White, Thayer
Goodenowe, Dayan B
author_sort Ritchie, Shawn A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The prognosis of pancreatic cancer (PC) is one of the poorest among all cancers, due largely to the lack of methods for screening and early detection. New biomarkers for identifying high-risk or early-stage subjects could significantly impact PC mortality. The goal of this study was to find metabolic biomarkers associated with PC by using a comprehensive metabolomics technology to compare serum profiles of PC patients to healthy control subjects. METHODS: A non-targeted metabolomics approach based on high-resolution, flow-injection Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FI-FTICR-MS) was used to generate comprehensive metabolomic profiles containing 2478 accurate mass measurements from the serum of Japanese PC patients (n=40) and disease-free subjects (n=50). Targeted flow-injection tandem mass spectrometry (FI-MS/MS) assays for specific metabolic systems were developed and used to validate the FI-FTICR-MS results. A FI-MS/MS assay for the most discriminating metabolite discovered by FI-FTICR-MS (PC-594) was further validated in two USA Caucasian populations; one comprised 14 PCs, six intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasims (IPMN) and 40 controls, and a second comprised 1000 reference subjects aged 30 to 80, which was used to create a distribution of PC-594 levels among the general population. RESULTS: FI-FTICR-MS metabolomic analysis showed significant reductions in the serum levels of metabolites belonging to five systems in PC patients compared to controls (all p<0.000025). The metabolic systems included 36-carbon ultra long-chain fatty acids, multiple choline-related systems including phosphatidylcholines, lysophosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelins, as well as vinyl ether-containing plasmalogen ethanolamines. ROC-AUCs based on FI-MS/MS of selected markers from each system ranged between 0.93 ±0.03 and 0.97 ±0.02. No significant correlations between any of the systems and disease-stage, gender, or treatment were observed. Biomarker PC-594 (an ultra long-chain fatty acid), was further validated using an independently-collected US Caucasian population (blinded analysis, n=60, p=9.9E-14, AUC=0.97 ±0.02). PC-594 levels across 1000 reference subjects showed an inverse correlation with age, resulting in a drop in the AUC from 0.99 ±0.01 to 0.90 ±0.02 for subjects aged 30 to 80, respectively. A PC-594 test positivity rate of 5.0% in low-risk reference subjects resulted in a PC sensitivity of 87% and a significant improvement in net clinical benefit based on decision curve analysis. CONCLUSIONS: The serum metabolome of PC patients is significantly altered. The utility of serum metabolite biomarkers, particularly PC-594, for identifying subjects with elevated risk of PC should be further investigated.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3847543
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38475432013-12-05 Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection Ritchie, Shawn A Akita, Hirofumi Takemasa, Ichiro Eguchi, Hidetoshi Pastural, Elodie Nagano, Hiroaki Monden, Morito Doki, Yuichiro Mori, Masaki Jin, Wei Sajobi, Tolulope T Jayasinghe, Dushmanthi Chitou, Bassirou Yamazaki, Yasuyo White, Thayer Goodenowe, Dayan B BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: The prognosis of pancreatic cancer (PC) is one of the poorest among all cancers, due largely to the lack of methods for screening and early detection. New biomarkers for identifying high-risk or early-stage subjects could significantly impact PC mortality. The goal of this study was to find metabolic biomarkers associated with PC by using a comprehensive metabolomics technology to compare serum profiles of PC patients to healthy control subjects. METHODS: A non-targeted metabolomics approach based on high-resolution, flow-injection Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FI-FTICR-MS) was used to generate comprehensive metabolomic profiles containing 2478 accurate mass measurements from the serum of Japanese PC patients (n=40) and disease-free subjects (n=50). Targeted flow-injection tandem mass spectrometry (FI-MS/MS) assays for specific metabolic systems were developed and used to validate the FI-FTICR-MS results. A FI-MS/MS assay for the most discriminating metabolite discovered by FI-FTICR-MS (PC-594) was further validated in two USA Caucasian populations; one comprised 14 PCs, six intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasims (IPMN) and 40 controls, and a second comprised 1000 reference subjects aged 30 to 80, which was used to create a distribution of PC-594 levels among the general population. RESULTS: FI-FTICR-MS metabolomic analysis showed significant reductions in the serum levels of metabolites belonging to five systems in PC patients compared to controls (all p<0.000025). The metabolic systems included 36-carbon ultra long-chain fatty acids, multiple choline-related systems including phosphatidylcholines, lysophosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelins, as well as vinyl ether-containing plasmalogen ethanolamines. ROC-AUCs based on FI-MS/MS of selected markers from each system ranged between 0.93 ±0.03 and 0.97 ±0.02. No significant correlations between any of the systems and disease-stage, gender, or treatment were observed. Biomarker PC-594 (an ultra long-chain fatty acid), was further validated using an independently-collected US Caucasian population (blinded analysis, n=60, p=9.9E-14, AUC=0.97 ±0.02). PC-594 levels across 1000 reference subjects showed an inverse correlation with age, resulting in a drop in the AUC from 0.99 ±0.01 to 0.90 ±0.02 for subjects aged 30 to 80, respectively. A PC-594 test positivity rate of 5.0% in low-risk reference subjects resulted in a PC sensitivity of 87% and a significant improvement in net clinical benefit based on decision curve analysis. CONCLUSIONS: The serum metabolome of PC patients is significantly altered. The utility of serum metabolite biomarkers, particularly PC-594, for identifying subjects with elevated risk of PC should be further investigated. BioMed Central 2013-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3847543/ /pubmed/24024929 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-416 Text en Copyright © 2013 Ritchie et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ritchie, Shawn A
Akita, Hirofumi
Takemasa, Ichiro
Eguchi, Hidetoshi
Pastural, Elodie
Nagano, Hiroaki
Monden, Morito
Doki, Yuichiro
Mori, Masaki
Jin, Wei
Sajobi, Tolulope T
Jayasinghe, Dushmanthi
Chitou, Bassirou
Yamazaki, Yasuyo
White, Thayer
Goodenowe, Dayan B
Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title_full Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title_fullStr Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title_short Metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
title_sort metabolic system alterations in pancreatic cancer patient serum: potential for early detection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3847543/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24024929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-416
work_keys_str_mv AT ritchieshawna metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT akitahirofumi metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT takemasaichiro metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT eguchihidetoshi metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT pasturalelodie metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT naganohiroaki metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT mondenmorito metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT dokiyuichiro metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT morimasaki metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT jinwei metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT sajobitolulopet metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT jayasinghedushmanthi metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT chitoubassirou metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT yamazakiyasuyo metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT whitethayer metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection
AT goodenowedayanb metabolicsystemalterationsinpancreaticcancerpatientserumpotentialforearlydetection