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Imaging, Diagnosis, Prognosis |
1 Lung and Esophageal Cancer Clinic, Chonnam National University Hwasun Hospital, Jeollanam-do, South Korea; Departments of 2 Pulmonology and Critical Care Medicine, 3 Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 4 Diagnostic Radiology, 5 Radiation Oncology, and 6 Pathology, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, South Korea; and 7 Department of Internal Medicine, Seonam University Medical School, Jeonbuk, South Korea
Requests for reprints: Young-Chul Kim, Lung and Esophageal Cancer Clinic, Chonnam National University Hwasun Hospital, 160 Ilsim-ri, Hwasun, Jeollanam-do, 519-809 South Korea. Phone: 82-61-379-7614; Fax: 82-61-379-7010; E-mail: kyc0923{at}jnu.ac.kr.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Receptor, Epidermal Growth Factor Mutation Carcinoma, Non Small Cell Lung Gefitinib Prediction of response
| INTRODUCTION |
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Gefitinib (ZD1839, Iressa) is an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Although the Iressa NonSmall Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC) Trial Assessing Combination Therapy study (2, 3) showed no benefit of adding gefitinib to cytotoxic chemotherapy, two phase II monotherapy trials (Iressa Dose Evaluation in Advanced Lung Cancer; refs. 4, 5) showed response rates of 10% to 20% with single-agent gefitinib in relapsed refractory NSCLC. Considering the increasing demand for third or fourth lines of treatment and the results of previous trials, a recent American Society of Clinical Oncology guideline (6) adopted gefitinib as a third line of treatment.
EGFR mediates cancer cell growth, proliferation, invasion, and metastasis, and inhibits apoptosis (7). Studies showed that gefitinib targets the ATP cleft within the tyrosine kinase domain of EGFR that is triggered by the binding of EGF. The phosphorylation of EGFR through tyrosine kinase domains inhibits the growth of human tumors (8). These results indicate that gefitinib has potential for treating lung cancers that are dependent on the activation of the EGFR pathway.
Despite a low response rate, the very rapid and often complete response to gefitinib in a subgroup of patients with NSCLC led us to search for predictors of the response. Although female gender, the presence of adenocarcinoma, and no smoking history might be markers of a favorable response, mutations of the EGFR gene are reported to show high positive predictive value for a response (9, 10).
In South Korea, gefitinib was used to treat 961 patients with NSCLC in the Expanded Access Program between December 2002 and July 2003. At our institution, we enrolled 70 patients in this program; after gefitinib became available commercially, 28 more patients were treated with this drug. This is a retrospective review of 98 NSCLC patients who were treated with gefitinib in a single Korean institution.
| PATIENTS AND METHODS |
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Treatment and Response Evaluation. Gefitinib was given at a dose of 250 mg once a day for between 5 and 952 days. To evaluate the therapeutic response and adverse reactions, chest radiographs, computed tomography (CT) scans, complete blood cell counts, and blood chemistries were monitored. We classified the therapeutic results as complete or partial remission and stable or progressive disease according to the response evaluation criteria for solid tumors (11).
The response could be evaluated in 80 patients who maintained treatment for more than 4 weeks. By the time the patients began to take gefitinib, 16 patients were in poor condition and could not maintain treatment for more than 4 weeks. Adverse events were graded using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 3.0 (December 2003, http://ctep.cancer.gov). One patient discontinued gefitinib because of skin eruptions (grade 3) and two patients because of interstitial pneumonia (grades 1 and 5).
Immunohistochemical Staining for Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Protein. The cancerous tissues from 30 patients were stained immunohistochemically for the EGFR. All the steps in the staining procedure were done using the Microprobe System (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA), taking advantage of capillary gap action (12). The tissue section was exposed to primary antibody for EGFR (Zymed, 31G7, San Francisco, CA) for 20 minutes after blocking endogenous peroxidase activity with Autoblocker (Research Genetics, Huntsville, AL) for 5 minutes. Antigen/antibody complexes were detected with a goat anti-mouse antibody (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) for 10 minutes followed by streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase (DAKO, Glostrup, Denmark) for 10 minutes. The chromogen reaction consisted of liquid 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAKO) for 10 minutes followed by a 30-second application of hematoxylin. Then, the sections were mounted in Faramount (DAKO).
Negative controls consisted of staining with primary antibody diluent (Research Genetics) only. All the slides were examined using standard light microscopy and were scored independently by two observers in quartiles as staining intensity from grades 1 to 4.
Sequence Analysis of the EGFR Gene. Twenty-seven tumor specimens (8 responders and 19 nonresponders) were available for the sequence analysis of exons 18, 19, and 21 of the EGFR gene. Tumor DNA and matched normal DNA were extracted from a paraffin-embedded tissue block and peripheral blood buffy coat. After deparaffinization in xylene, DNA was extracted using a Gene All Tissue DNA Purification kit (General Biosystem, Seoul, South Korea).
For the PCR, three sets of previously reported primers (10) were used. Using a Perkin-Elmer 2400 thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer Corp., Norwalk, CT), PCR was carried out with an initial 5-minute denaturation at 94°C, followed by 40 cycles of 30 seconds at 94°C (denaturation), 30 seconds at 58°C (annealing), and 1 minute at 72°C (extension), and then by 10 minutes at 72°C and a final cooling to 4°C. For one PCR reaction, 100 ng of template DNA were mixed with 1.5 µL of each primer at a concentration of 10 pmol, 2 units of Taq DNA polymerase (Super Bio, Seoul, South Korea), 0.2 mmol/L deoxynucleotide triphosphate (Super Bio), 3 mmol/L MgCl2, 100 mmol/L KCl, and 17 µL sterilized distilled water. Pure water was used to replace the template (DNA) as a negative control for every PCR experiment. The PCR products were confirmed by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis.
For sequencing, the PCR products were purified using a Gene All PCR Purification kit (General Biosystem). Sequencing was done using an ABI Prism 3100 Genetic Analyzer (PE Biosystems, Foster City, CA), according to the protocol of the manufacturer; the reagent mixtures contained 1 µL of 1.6 pmol forward primer, 1 µL Big Dye Terminator, 3.5 µL Thermo Sequence reagent, and 1.5 µL sterilized distilled water. The reaction tubes were placed in the thermal cycler, and amplification was started with an initial heating at 96°C for 1 minute, followed by 25 cycles of 94°C for 10 seconds, 50°C for 30 seconds, and 60°C for 4 minutes, with a final cooling to 4°C. After amplification and ethanol precipitation, the products were sequenced. Sequences with deletion or mutation were verified with both forward and reverse sequencing analyses.
Statistical Analysis. Statistical analyses were done using SPSS for Windows version 12.0 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL). Descriptive statistics, frequency tables,
2 tests, and univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression analyses were used. Predictors of response were investigated, including age, nature of prior therapies and time elapsed since prior therapy before gefitinib, gender, histology, and smoking history.
Survival time and time to progression were recorded as days from the beginning of gefitinib treatment. Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate survival and time to progression. Univariate analyses of survival and time to progression according to predictors were done using a log-rank test.
| RESULTS |
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In 20 responders, improved radiologic findings and tumor-related symptoms were noted within 4 weeks. Figure 1 shows an index case that displayed rapid resolution. Within 7 days of gefitinib administration, a rapid reduction of bronchorrhea and a resolution of pulmonary infiltrate were noted, and the subject has been maintained on gefitinib for more than 520 days.
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A 69-year-old male with squamous cell carcinoma had been taking gefitinib for 56 days when he returned to the clinic for response evaluation. The chest radiography and CT scan (Fig. 2A) showed interstitial infiltrates and ground-glass attenuations. Therefore, we discontinued gefitinib and started empirical therapy with prednisolone and clarithromycin. After 2 weeks, the chest CT (Fig. 2B) showed resolution of the interstitial infiltrates and the interstitial pneumonia did not recur. The response to gefitinib was classified as stable disease.
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65 (35.0%) versus age > 65 years (15.0%, P = 0.039), and in females (42.1%) versus males (19.7%, P = 0.049). The degree of improvement of tumor-related symptoms was also significantly positively correlated with the response (Table 3).
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In a multivariate logistic analysis using the variables that were significant in the univariate analyses, the independent predictors of response were smoking history [odds ratio, 0.21; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.06-0.72; P = 0.01] and adenocarcinoma (odds ratio, 4.30; 95% CI, 1.19-15.49; P = 0.03). Therefore, we classified the subjects according to smoking history and histologic type. The response rate of the subgroup with non-adenocarcinoma and smoking history was 7.9% (3/38), that of the subgroup with either adenocarcinoma or never-smoked was 28.6% (8/28), and that of the subgroup with adenocarcinoma and no smoking history was 64.3% (9/14, P < 0.001).
Sequencing Results and Correlation with the Response to Gefitinib. The EGFR gene was sequenced in 27 cases (8 partial remission, 19 stable disease + progressive disease). No mutation was found in the 19 nonresponders, whereas six of eight responders had mutations in the EGFR gene. Homozygous (n = 1) or heterozygous (n = 4) deletions of exon 19 were found in five responders. The deletions involved 15 or 18 bases between nucleotides 2,235 and 2,253, spanning codons 746 to 751 within the kinase domain of EGFR. DNA with a homozygous deletion was obtained from metastatic brain tumor tissue, and the samples with heterozygous deletions were from primary lung cancer tissue. The point mutation in exon 21 found in one responder was also heterozygous and involved an L858R amino acid substitution. The regions at which deletions and point mutations occurred were similar to those previously reported (refs. 9, 10; Table 4 and Fig. 3). None of the matched DNA from peripheral blood leukocytes showed mutations in the EGFR gene.
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Survival and Time to Progression Analyses. The median survival time was 173 days (95% CI, 116-230 days). Median survival was significantly shorter in patients with progressive disease (130 days; 95% CI, 116-144 days) or stable disease (141 days; 95% CI, 52-230 days) compared with those who showed partial remission (618 days; 95% CI, 554-682 days, log-rank P < 0.001, Fig. 4A).
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Survival and time to progression according to predictors of response were summarized in Table 5. The smoking history, histologic type, and mutation of EGFR gene were significantly correlated with survival.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Patients with NSCLC respond to chemotherapeutic agents in different ways. We observe patients who respond to one regimen but not to the others. As no reliable chemosensitivity tests are available, we can only try two or more cycles until we can determine the response to a regimen. If we could predict the response to drugs before we use them, we should be able to offer more effective treatment whereas the patients are still in reasonable physical health.
Studies examining the status of target genes or target molecules of cytotoxic chemotherapeutic drugs are ongoing. For example, platinum compounds act by making DNA adducts in tumor cells. If the DNA-repair enzyme activity is high in tumor cells, platinum-based chemotherapy may be less effective. The mRNA of excision repair cross-complementation group 1 (ERCC1) expression was reported to be a predictor of survival in patients treated with platinum-based chemotherapy (14). A polymorphism of the ERCC1 gene, which alters the activity of the enzyme, was also reported to predict survival in patients with NSCLC who were treated with platinum-based chemotherapy (15).
Recently, the mRNA of the M1 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase, a housekeeping enzyme that supplies DNA substrates, was also reported to predict survival in gemcitabine-treated patients (16). As microtubules are targets of taxanes, mutations of tubulin genes are also possible predictors of the response to taxanes (17). However, more data are needed before this can be used clinically because of the weak correlations with the response to chemotherapy.
Conversely, predicting the response would be easier for targeted therapies. In breast cancer, expression of HER2 protein and HER2 gene amplifications predict the response to HER2 monoclonal antibody (trastuzumab; ref. 18). However, the expression of EGFR is not correlated with the response to gefitinib. Gefitinib has anticancer activity via the dose-dependent inhibition of EGFR autophosphorylation in tumor cell lines (19). Nevertheless, tumor cell growth inhibition by gefitinib is not strongly influenced by the level of EGFR expression (20). In our study, the EGFR staining intensity did not differ with the therapeutic response to gefitinib in 30 patients.
Although the expression of EGFR protein was not a reliable predictor of the response to gefitinib, the pathologic type adenocarcinoma, female gender, and lifetime non-tobacco use were reported to be associated with a good response rate or survival (2124). Our data concur with those previous results (i.e., those three variables have high predictability). Nevertheless, in the multivariate analysis, female gender lost its significance, and the independent predictors of the response were adenocarcinoma and never-smoked. In view of the higher probability of a response in patients with adenocarcinoma who never smoked, an adenocarcinoma that developed in nonsmoking patients is more likely to have different characteristics in the EGFR gene or its expression.
Two recent studies (9, 10) found mutations in the EGFR gene only in responders to gefitinib. Most of the responders had a deletion in exon 19 or point mutations in exon 18 or 21 of the EGFR gene, whereas none of the nonresponders had these mutations. Moreover, these mutations of EGFR doubled or tripled the EGF signal and prolonged the activation compared with the wild-type receptor. The mutations are thought to be correlated with gefitinib sensitivity because the mutant receptors on tumor cells are significantly more sensitive to gefitinib and play a significant role.
A subsequent study (25) showed that these EGFR mutants selectively activate the Akt and signal transducers and activators of transcription signaling pathways, which promote cell survival. NSCLC cells expressing EGFR mutants underwent extensive apoptosis after knockdown of the mutant EGFR. Therefore, it is possible that inhibiting the mutant EGFR causes tumor cell apoptosis and a rapid therapeutic effect.
In this study, we found similar deletions in exon 19 and mutations in exon 21, which are the coding sequences for the amino acids in the tyrosine kinase domains of EGFR. The matched normal DNA showed no mutations, and thus EGFR mutations must be somatic in origin. The heterozygous nature of somatic mutations implies that they exert a dominant oncogenic effect in tumor cells. However, neither the previous studies (9, 10) nor ours used a laser capture technique to extract tumor DNA specifically; normal lung DNA might have been included. Therefore, the gefitinib-responsive mutations may be homozygous, as seen in DNA from a metastatic brain tumor in our study and a case from Paez et al. (9).
The incidence and severity of adverse events were similar to those in previous reports (4, 5). We experienced two cases (2.8%) with interstitial pneumonia possibly associated with gefitinib. The reported incidence of interstitial pneumonia is 1% worldwide and about 0.3% and 2% in the United States and Japan, respectively. After interstitial pneumonia develops, the mortality is about 30% (26). Although the mechanism and risk factors of interstitial pneumonia are not yet understood, underlying pulmonary fibrosis was reported as a risk factor (27). One should look for this possible adverse reaction with serial X-rays at follow-up, especially during the first few months of treatment (2729).
In the present report, we have summarized our findings on the effects of gefitinib in 98 Korean patients with NSCLC. We observed responses and adverse events similar to those reported previously, and the independent predictors of a response were never-smoked and adenocarcinoma. We also observed mutations of the EGFR gene as a highly predictive marker of the response to gefitinib. The predictors of response showed significant correlations with survival and time to progression.
In conclusion, the genetic profile may replace those variables as an independent predictor of response because about 10% of smokers and of those with non-adenocarcinoma also showed mutations of the EGFR gene. The high positive-predictive value of mutations suggests the possibility of tailored therapy for patients with NSCLC, even as a first or second line of treatment.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Received 10/11/04; revised 12/ 9/04; accepted 12/16/04.
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