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Molecular Analysis of Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Identifies Subsets with Different Sensitivity to Insulin-like Growth Factor I Receptor Inhibition

Authors :
Sandra A McDonald
Marisa Dolled-Filhart
Corey J. Langer
David L. Rimm
Luis Paz-Ares
Mary L. Hixon
Johnetta Blakely
Linda L. Garland
Jennifer M. Reynolds
Jason Christiansen
Adrian V. Lee
Mark Gustavson
Antonio Gualberto
Yu-Fen Wang
Agnes Ang
Daniel D. Karp
Source :
Clinical Cancer Research. 16:4654-4665
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2010.

Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to identify molecular determinants of sensitivity of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to anti–insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-IR) therapy. Experimental Design: A total of 216 tumor samples were investigated, of which 165 consisted of retrospective analyses of banked tissue and an additional 51 were from patients enrolled in a phase II study of figitumumab, a monoclonal antibody against IGF-IR, in stage IIIb/IV NSCLC. Biomarkers assessed included IGF-IR, epidermal growth factor receptor, IGF-II, IGF-IIR, insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1), IRS-2, vimentin, and E-cadherin. Subcellular localization of IRS-1 and phosphorylation levels of mitogen-activated protein kinase and Akt1 were also analyzed. Results: IGF-IR was differentially expressed across histologic subtypes (P = 0.04), with highest levels observed in squamous cell tumors. Elevated IGF-IR expression was also observed in a small number of squamous cell tumors responding to chemotherapy combined with figitumumab (P = 0.008). Because no other biomarker/response interaction was observed using classical histologic subtyping, a molecular approach was undertaken to segment NSCLC into mechanism-based subpopulations. Principal component analysis and unsupervised Bayesian clustering identified three NSCLC subsets that resembled the steps of the epithelial to mesenchymal transition: E-cadherin high/IRS-1 low (epithelial-like), E-cadherin intermediate/IRS-1 high (transitional), and E-cadherin low/IRS-1 low (mesenchymal-like). Several markers of the IGF-IR pathway were overexpressed in the transitional subset. Furthermore, a higher response rate to the combination of chemotherapy and figitumumab was observed in transitional tumors (71%) compared with those in the mesenchymal-like subset (32%; P = 0.03). Only one epithelial-like tumor was identified in the phase II study, suggesting that advanced NSCLC has undergone significant dedifferentiation at diagnosis. Conclusion: NSCLC comprises molecular subsets with differential sensitivity to IGF-IR inhibition. Clin Cancer Res; 16(18); 4654–65. ©2010 AACR.

Details

ISSN :
15573265 and 10780432
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71ec4c64f96d1b40f3662f72418f1ef5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-10-0089