Cargando…

Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer

BACKGROUND: The prognostic relevance of prostate cancer (PCa) molecular subtypes remains controversial, given the presence of multiple foci with the possibility of different subtypes in the same patient. AIM: To determine the clonal origin of heterogeneity in PCa and its association with disease pro...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile, Sanabria‐Salas, María Carolina, Mesa‐López De Mesa, Jorge Andrés, Varela‐Ramirez, Rodolfo, Acosta‐Vega, Natalia Lizeth, Serrano, Martha Lucía
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9940006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36199157
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cnr2.1728
_version_ 1784890989796655104
author Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile
Sanabria‐Salas, María Carolina
Mesa‐López De Mesa, Jorge Andrés
Varela‐Ramirez, Rodolfo
Acosta‐Vega, Natalia Lizeth
Serrano, Martha Lucía
author_facet Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile
Sanabria‐Salas, María Carolina
Mesa‐López De Mesa, Jorge Andrés
Varela‐Ramirez, Rodolfo
Acosta‐Vega, Natalia Lizeth
Serrano, Martha Lucía
author_sort Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The prognostic relevance of prostate cancer (PCa) molecular subtypes remains controversial, given the presence of multiple foci with the possibility of different subtypes in the same patient. AIM: To determine the clonal origin of heterogeneity in PCa and its association with disease progression, SPOP, ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes were analyzed. METHODS: A total of 103 samples from 20 PCa patients were analyzed; foci of adjacent non‐tumor prostate tissue, HGPIN, GL3, GL4, GL5, and LN were examined to determine the presence of the TMPRSS2‐ERG fusion and ERG, EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 expression levels, using RT‐PCR. Mutations in exons 6 and 7 of the SPOP gene were determined by sequencing. The presence of subtypes and molecular patterns were identified by combining all subtypes analyzed. To establish the clonal origin of multifocal PCa, molecular concordance between different foci of the same patient was determined. Association of these subtypes with histopathological groups and time to biochemical recurrence (BCR) was assessed. RESULTS: No mutation was found in SPOP in any sample. The ERG(+) subtype was the most frequent. The molecular pattern containing all four PCa subtypes was only detected in 3 samples (4%), all LN, but it was the most frequent (40%) in patients. Molecular discordance was the predominant status (55%) when all analyzed molecular characteristics were considered. It was possible to find all subtypes, starting as a preneoplastic lesion, and all but one LN molecular subtype were ERG(+) and NKX3.1 subtypes. Only the expression of the NKX3.1 gene was significantly different among the histopathological groups. No association was found between BCR time in patients and molecular subtypes or molecular concordance or between clinicopathological characteristics and molecular subtypes of ERG, EZH2, and SPINK‐1. CONCLUSION: The predominance of molecular discordance in prostatic foci per patient, which reflects the multifocal origin of PCa foci, highlights the importance of analyzing multiple samples to establish the prognostic and therapeutic relevance of molecular subtypes in a patient. All the subtypes analyzed here are of early onset, starting from preneoplastic lesions. NKX3.1 gene expression is the only molecular characteristic that shows a progression pattern by sample.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9940006
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99400062023-02-21 Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile Sanabria‐Salas, María Carolina Mesa‐López De Mesa, Jorge Andrés Varela‐Ramirez, Rodolfo Acosta‐Vega, Natalia Lizeth Serrano, Martha Lucía Cancer Rep (Hoboken) Original Articles BACKGROUND: The prognostic relevance of prostate cancer (PCa) molecular subtypes remains controversial, given the presence of multiple foci with the possibility of different subtypes in the same patient. AIM: To determine the clonal origin of heterogeneity in PCa and its association with disease progression, SPOP, ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes were analyzed. METHODS: A total of 103 samples from 20 PCa patients were analyzed; foci of adjacent non‐tumor prostate tissue, HGPIN, GL3, GL4, GL5, and LN were examined to determine the presence of the TMPRSS2‐ERG fusion and ERG, EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 expression levels, using RT‐PCR. Mutations in exons 6 and 7 of the SPOP gene were determined by sequencing. The presence of subtypes and molecular patterns were identified by combining all subtypes analyzed. To establish the clonal origin of multifocal PCa, molecular concordance between different foci of the same patient was determined. Association of these subtypes with histopathological groups and time to biochemical recurrence (BCR) was assessed. RESULTS: No mutation was found in SPOP in any sample. The ERG(+) subtype was the most frequent. The molecular pattern containing all four PCa subtypes was only detected in 3 samples (4%), all LN, but it was the most frequent (40%) in patients. Molecular discordance was the predominant status (55%) when all analyzed molecular characteristics were considered. It was possible to find all subtypes, starting as a preneoplastic lesion, and all but one LN molecular subtype were ERG(+) and NKX3.1 subtypes. Only the expression of the NKX3.1 gene was significantly different among the histopathological groups. No association was found between BCR time in patients and molecular subtypes or molecular concordance or between clinicopathological characteristics and molecular subtypes of ERG, EZH2, and SPINK‐1. CONCLUSION: The predominance of molecular discordance in prostatic foci per patient, which reflects the multifocal origin of PCa foci, highlights the importance of analyzing multiple samples to establish the prognostic and therapeutic relevance of molecular subtypes in a patient. All the subtypes analyzed here are of early onset, starting from preneoplastic lesions. NKX3.1 gene expression is the only molecular characteristic that shows a progression pattern by sample. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9940006/ /pubmed/36199157 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cnr2.1728 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Cancer Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Segura‐Moreno, Yenifer Yamile
Sanabria‐Salas, María Carolina
Mesa‐López De Mesa, Jorge Andrés
Varela‐Ramirez, Rodolfo
Acosta‐Vega, Natalia Lizeth
Serrano, Martha Lucía
Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title_full Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title_fullStr Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title_full_unstemmed Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title_short Determination of ERG(+), EZH2, NKX3.1, and SPINK‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
title_sort determination of erg(+), ezh2, nkx3.1, and spink‐1 subtypes to evaluate their association with clonal origin and disease progression in multifocal prostate cancer
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9940006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36199157
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cnr2.1728
work_keys_str_mv AT seguramorenoyeniferyamile determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer
AT sanabriasalasmariacarolina determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer
AT mesalopezdemesajorgeandres determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer
AT varelaramirezrodolfo determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer
AT acostaveganatalializeth determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer
AT serranomarthalucia determinationofergezh2nkx31andspink1subtypestoevaluatetheirassociationwithclonaloriginanddiseaseprogressioninmultifocalprostatecancer