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Molecular Profiling for Predictors of Radiosensitivity in Patients with Breast or Head-and-Neck Cancer

Authors :
Drobin, Kimi
Marczyk, Michal
Halle, Martin
Danielsson, Daniel
Papiez, Anna
Sangsuwan, Traimate
Bendes, Annika
Hong, Mun-Gwan
Qundos, Ulrika
Harms-Ringdahl, Mats
Wersall, Peter
Polanska, Joanna
Schwenk, Jochen M.
Haghdoost, Siamak
Drobin, Kimi
Marczyk, Michal
Halle, Martin
Danielsson, Daniel
Papiez, Anna
Sangsuwan, Traimate
Bendes, Annika
Hong, Mun-Gwan
Qundos, Ulrika
Harms-Ringdahl, Mats
Wersall, Peter
Polanska, Joanna
Schwenk, Jochen M.
Haghdoost, Siamak
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Nearly half of all cancers are treated with radiotherapy alone or in combination with other treatments, where damage to normal tissues is a limiting factor for the treatment. Radiotherapy-induced adverse health effects, mostly of importance for cancer patients with long-term survival, may appear during or long time after finishing radiotherapy and depending on the patient's radiosensitivity. Currently, there is no assay available that can reliably predict the individual's response to radiotherapy. We profiled two study sets from breast (n = 29) and head-and-neck cancer patients (n = 74) that included radiosensitive patients and matched radioresistant controls. We studied 55 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 33 genes by DNA genotyping and 130 circulating proteins by affinity-based plasma proteomics. In both study sets, we discovered several plasma proteins with the predictive power to find radiosensitive patients (adjusted p < 0.05) and validated the two most predictive proteins (THPO and STIM1) by sandwich immunoassays. By integrating genotypic and proteomic data into an analysis model, it was found that the proteins CHIT1, PDGFB, PNKD, RP2, SERPINC1, SLC4A, STIM1, and THPO, as well as the VEGFA gene variant rs69947, predicted radiosensitivity of our breast cancer (AUC = 0.76) and head-and-neck cancer (AUC = 0.89) patients. In conclusion, circulating proteins and a SNP variant of VEGFA suggest that processes such as vascular growth capacity, immune response, DNA repair and oxidative stress/hypoxia may be involved in an individual's risk of experiencing radiation-induced toxicity.<br />QC 20200622

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1235045536
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390.cancers12030753