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Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes

BACKGROUND: Metastatic prostate cancer (CaP) treatments are evolving rapidly but without evidence-based biomarkers to predict responses, and to maximize remissions and survival. OBJECTIVE: To determine the activity of androgen receptor (AR), the target for default first-line systemic treatment, in l...

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Autores principales: Ben-Salem, Salma, Hu, Qiang, Liu, Yang, Alshalalfa, Mohammed, Zhao, Xin, Wang, Irene, Venkadakrishnan, Varadha Balaji, Senapati, Dhirodatta, Kumari, Sangeeta, Liu, Deli, Sboner, Andrea, Barbieri, Christopher E., Feng, Felix, Billaud, Jean-Noel, Davicioni, Elai, Liu, Song, Heemers, Hannelore V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7723342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33299986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2020.10.002
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author Ben-Salem, Salma
Hu, Qiang
Liu, Yang
Alshalalfa, Mohammed
Zhao, Xin
Wang, Irene
Venkadakrishnan, Varadha Balaji
Senapati, Dhirodatta
Kumari, Sangeeta
Liu, Deli
Sboner, Andrea
Barbieri, Christopher E.
Feng, Felix
Billaud, Jean-Noel
Davicioni, Elai
Liu, Song
Heemers, Hannelore V.
author_facet Ben-Salem, Salma
Hu, Qiang
Liu, Yang
Alshalalfa, Mohammed
Zhao, Xin
Wang, Irene
Venkadakrishnan, Varadha Balaji
Senapati, Dhirodatta
Kumari, Sangeeta
Liu, Deli
Sboner, Andrea
Barbieri, Christopher E.
Feng, Felix
Billaud, Jean-Noel
Davicioni, Elai
Liu, Song
Heemers, Hannelore V.
author_sort Ben-Salem, Salma
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Metastatic prostate cancer (CaP) treatments are evolving rapidly but without evidence-based biomarkers to predict responses, and to maximize remissions and survival. OBJECTIVE: To determine the activity of androgen receptor (AR), the target for default first-line systemic treatment, in localized treatment-naïve CaP and its association with clinical risk factors, molecular markers, CaP subtypes, and predictors of treatment response. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We examined 452 bona fide AR target genes in clinical-grade expression profiles from 6532 such CaPs collected between 2013 and 2017 by US physicians ordering the Decipher RP test. Results were validated in three independent smaller cohorts (n = 73, 90, and 127) and clinical CaP AR ChIP-Seq data. Association with CaP differentiation and progression was analyzed in independent datasets. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Unsupervised clustering of CaPs based on AR target gene expression was aligned with clinical variables, differentiation scores, molecular subtypes, and predictors of response to hormonal therapy, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. AR target gene sets were analyzed via Gene Set Enrichment Analysis for differentiation and treatment resistance, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis for associated biology, and Cistrome for genomic AR binding site (ARBS) composition. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Expression of eight AR target gene subsignatures gave rise to five CaP clusters, which were preferentially associated with CaP molecular subtypes, differentiation, and predictors of treatment response rather than with clinical variables. Subsignatures differed in contribution to CaP progression, luminal/basal differentiation, CaP biology, and ARBS composition. Validation in prospective trials and optimized quantitation are needed for clinical implementation. CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of AR activity patterns in treatment-naïve CaP may serve as a first branch of an evidence-based decision tree to optimize personalized treatment plans. PATIENT SUMMARY: Treatment options for metastatic prostate cancer are increasing without information needed to choose the right treatment for the right patient. We found variation in the behavior of the target for the default first-line therapy before treatment, which may help optimize treatment plans.
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spelling pubmed-77233422020-12-08 Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes Ben-Salem, Salma Hu, Qiang Liu, Yang Alshalalfa, Mohammed Zhao, Xin Wang, Irene Venkadakrishnan, Varadha Balaji Senapati, Dhirodatta Kumari, Sangeeta Liu, Deli Sboner, Andrea Barbieri, Christopher E. Feng, Felix Billaud, Jean-Noel Davicioni, Elai Liu, Song Heemers, Hannelore V. Eur Urol Open Sci Prostate Cancer BACKGROUND: Metastatic prostate cancer (CaP) treatments are evolving rapidly but without evidence-based biomarkers to predict responses, and to maximize remissions and survival. OBJECTIVE: To determine the activity of androgen receptor (AR), the target for default first-line systemic treatment, in localized treatment-naïve CaP and its association with clinical risk factors, molecular markers, CaP subtypes, and predictors of treatment response. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We examined 452 bona fide AR target genes in clinical-grade expression profiles from 6532 such CaPs collected between 2013 and 2017 by US physicians ordering the Decipher RP test. Results were validated in three independent smaller cohorts (n = 73, 90, and 127) and clinical CaP AR ChIP-Seq data. Association with CaP differentiation and progression was analyzed in independent datasets. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Unsupervised clustering of CaPs based on AR target gene expression was aligned with clinical variables, differentiation scores, molecular subtypes, and predictors of response to hormonal therapy, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. AR target gene sets were analyzed via Gene Set Enrichment Analysis for differentiation and treatment resistance, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis for associated biology, and Cistrome for genomic AR binding site (ARBS) composition. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Expression of eight AR target gene subsignatures gave rise to five CaP clusters, which were preferentially associated with CaP molecular subtypes, differentiation, and predictors of treatment response rather than with clinical variables. Subsignatures differed in contribution to CaP progression, luminal/basal differentiation, CaP biology, and ARBS composition. Validation in prospective trials and optimized quantitation are needed for clinical implementation. CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of AR activity patterns in treatment-naïve CaP may serve as a first branch of an evidence-based decision tree to optimize personalized treatment plans. PATIENT SUMMARY: Treatment options for metastatic prostate cancer are increasing without information needed to choose the right treatment for the right patient. We found variation in the behavior of the target for the default first-line therapy before treatment, which may help optimize treatment plans. Elsevier 2020-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7723342/ /pubmed/33299986 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2020.10.002 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Prostate Cancer
Ben-Salem, Salma
Hu, Qiang
Liu, Yang
Alshalalfa, Mohammed
Zhao, Xin
Wang, Irene
Venkadakrishnan, Varadha Balaji
Senapati, Dhirodatta
Kumari, Sangeeta
Liu, Deli
Sboner, Andrea
Barbieri, Christopher E.
Feng, Felix
Billaud, Jean-Noel
Davicioni, Elai
Liu, Song
Heemers, Hannelore V.
Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title_full Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title_fullStr Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title_full_unstemmed Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title_short Diversity in Androgen Receptor Action Among Treatment-naïve Prostate Cancers Is Reflected in Treatment Response Predictions and Molecular Subtypes
title_sort diversity in androgen receptor action among treatment-naïve prostate cancers is reflected in treatment response predictions and molecular subtypes
topic Prostate Cancer
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7723342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33299986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2020.10.002
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