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Cancer Prevention |
Authors' Affiliations: 1 Departments of Pathology and Medicine/Pulmonary, University of Colorado Cancer Center, 2 Departments of Pathology and Medicine/Pulmonary, Denver Veteran's Administration Medical Center, Denver, Colorado, 3 University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland, 4 Athens Chest Hospital, Center of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Athens, Greece, and 5 Naestved Hospital, Department of Medicine, Naestved, Denmark
Requests for reprints: Fred R. Hirsch, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, P.O. Box 6511, Mail Stop 8111, Aurora, CO 80045. Phone: 303-399-8020; Fax: 303-393-5036; E-mail: Daniel.Merrick{at}med.va.gov.
| Abstract |
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Experimental Design: Immunohistochemical analysis of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR; c-ErbB1/EGFR), HER-2/neu (c-ErbB2/HER-2), Ki-67, and minichromosome maintenance protein 2 (MCM2) expression in bronchial dysplasia was undertaken to characterize molecular alterations associated with the progression of these lesions in 268 bronchoscopically obtained biopsies from 134 subjects.
Results: Analysis of biopsies with the most severe diagnosis from each subject showed a linear relationship between increasing marker expression and severity of dysplastic change for EGFR (P < 0.001), Ki-67 (P < 0.001), and MCM2 (P = 0.001) but not HER-2 (P = 0.102). Increased expression of either EGFR or HER-2 was associated with increased levels of Ki-67 and MCM2 expression, and combined overexpression of these receptors was associated with the highest levels of proliferation, suggesting a synergistic effect. Finally, the lack of an associated trend toward increased EGFR expression when comparing the worst and best biopsies within each subject indicated a potential field effect in the induction of EGFR expression.
Conclusions: The results suggest a prominent role for EGFR overexpression in the development and progression of bronchial dysplasia and provide rationale for exploring inhibition of EGFR signaling in lung cancer chemoprevention.
A distinctive feature of bronchial dysplasia is the presence of increased epithelial proliferation compared with normal bronchial mucosa. The ErbB receptor [epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)] family is thought to play a primary role in the control of epithelial cell proliferation. This family is composed of four semihomologous receptors that can interact with several ligands and generate intracellular signaling as homodimer or heterodimer pairs (9, 10). Ligand interaction and subsequent dimerization lead to activation of kinase activity associated with the intracellular domains of these transmembrane receptors. This leads to subsequent activation of downstream cytoplasmic and nuclear second messengers (1113). Increased activity of c-ErbB1/EGFR is associated with the alteration of several important cellular processes, including induction of cellular proliferation, activation of angiogenesis, development of metastatic capacity, and reduced apoptosis (1417). EGFR protein expression is normally limited to the basal layer of stratified squamous epithelium, whereas the expression of c-ErbB2/HER-2 (HER-2/neu) is less consistent, being found only in the basal layer of cervical squamous epithelium or the intermediate layers of oral mucosa (18, 19). The roles of the other members of this receptor family (c-ErbB3 and c-ErbB4) in the control of epithelial proliferation are less well characterized.
Increased expression of EGFR and its association with induction of increased expression of proliferation markers, such as Ki-67 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen, has been shown previously in premalignant lesions of the skin and laryngeal mucosa (20, 21). Similarly, such changes are found in squamous metaplasia and premalignant dysplasias of uterine cervix (18, 22). Bronchial mucosa shows metaplastic change to a squamous mucosa in airway injury secondary to stimuli, such as tobacco smoke exposure. These metaplastic bronchial sites may or may not be associated with epithelial atypia (dysplasia). Increased expression of EGFR has been shown in the majority of nonsmall cell lung cancers with overexpression in up to 85% of squamous cell lung carcinomas (2327). In some studies, EGFR overexpression has also been shown to have prognostic implications in lung cancer (28, 29), whereas, in others, including studies from our institution, no significant association with prognosis was found (26). Bronchial dysplasia is believed to be the precursor of squamous cell lung carcinoma; thus, EGFR might play a significant role in the progression of these lesions to invasive cancer. In addition, demonstration of a key role for the ErbB family of receptors in the development of premalignant lesions would have significance because several new therapeutic inhibitors of this pathway are now available. Promising results with EGFR inhibitors have been seen in patients with advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer where a survival benefit has been shown in cases in which prior treatment with conventional chemotherapy has failed (30). Furthermore, the toxicity associated with EGFR inhibitors seems to be less significant than that seen with conventional chemotherapeutics, making these agents potential candidates for chemoprevention purposes. Some previous immunohistochemical studies in bronchial dysplasia have shown EGFR expression and an association with increased cellular proliferation (3135). However, an extensive evaluation of the relationship between levels of expression of the primary members of the ErbB receptor family and their association with the degree of bronchial dysplasia, as defined by WHO criteria, has not been done.
In this study, we analyze bronchial biopsies from 134 subjects. Expression of EGFR, HER-2, Ki-67, and minichromosome maintenance protein 2 (MCM2) is measured by immunohistochemistry to assess ErbB receptor pathway activity in bronchial dysplasia. EGFR and HER-2 expression in bronchial epithelium is characterized and the relationship between the levels of expression of these markers and degree of dysplasia and epithelial proliferation is evaluated to explore the potential role of EGFR blockage for chemoprevention of lung cancer.
| Materials and Methods |
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Assessment of immunohistochemical staining. A scoring system that allowed for quantitation independent of morphology was developed to assess EGFR and HER-2 expression. EGFR and HER-2 expression were characterized for both distribution and intensity. Lack of expression was occasionally seen with HER-2 immunostains, but EGFR staining was generally found in at least a portion of the basal layer of bronchial epithelia. True negative staining was given a distribution score of 0. Receptor expression confined to the lower half of the epithelium was given a distribution score of 1. This was the most common pattern seen in normal bronchus and all biopsies showing this distribution of staining were considered not to be overexpressors of EGFR or HER-2. A distribution score of 2 corresponded to staining extending into to the upper half and/or involving the entire thickness of the epithelium. This score was considered to represent overexpression of the receptor. Although increases in receptor staining intensity (scored from none to strong: 0-4, respectively) correlated with increased receptor distribution scores (data not shown), taken alone, intensity scores showed a less consistent relationship to histology, clinical variables, and expression of proliferation markers than distribution of receptor expression. Therefore, distribution scores were used in the analyses presented herein. Averages of distribution scores were calculated for EGFR and HER-2 expression levels in biopsies grouped according to histologic grade or clinical variables of smoking status, subject age, and subject gender (Table 1 ). Correlative studies were done to test for associations between increased EGFR and/or HER-2 receptor expression (distribution score = 2) and expression of Ki-67 and MCM2 (Tables 2 and 3 ) or within-subject differences in histologic grade (Table 4 ). Ki-67 and MCM2 were scored as percentage of positive cells (400 cells total counted per biopsy) and average scores were calculated for groups of biopsies as defined by histology, clinical variable, or receptor expression.
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2 method. Results are reported as two-sided Ps and/or 95% confidence intervals. | Results |
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Characteristics of EGFR, HER-2, Ki-67, and MCM2 expression in bronchial dysplasia and lung cancer. Expression of EGFR, Ki-67, and MCM2 but not HER-2 showed a statistically significant positive association with histologic grade in analyses of the most atypical biopsies from each subject (Table 1). HER-2 expression was lowest in normal bronchial mucosa (average score, 1.69), and the average score tended to increase to 2.0 as histology increased; however, the overall trend was only marginally significant (P = 0.102). In contrast, strongly significant, progressive increases in marker expression were noted as histologic class increased from 1 to 8 for EGFR (1.47-2.0), Ki-67 (10.94-66.75), and MCM2 (72.94-96.04). A statistically significant association between Ki-67 expression and smoking status was noted, but no other statistically significant relationships between demographic characteristics (smoking status, age, and gender) and the expression of EGFR, HER-2, Ki-67, and MCM2 were identified (Table 1). Age- and gender-adjusted analyses indicated that these factors were not confounding the association between marker expression and histology (data not shown). Figure 2 shows representative H&E-stained sections from bronchial biopsies of normal, basal cell hyperplasia, low-grade dysplasia, and high-grade dysplasia with the corresponding data correlating degree of dysplasia with frequency of EGFR, HER-2, Ki-67, and MCM2 overexpression. Figure 2 includes expression data from all biopsies regardless of whether they represent the worst or best histology from a given subject. Comparisons of 28 lesions subclassified as ASD (see Fig. 2, HGD) with non-ASD specimens from the same histologic categories did not reveal statistically significant differences in frequency of EGFR or HER-2 overexpression (data not shown).
Correlation between increased receptor expression and Ki-67 and MCM2 expression. As shown in Table 2, specimens that expressed high levels (score = 2) of EGFR or HER-2 also showed significantly elevated expression of Ki-67 (P < 0.001 for both receptors) and MCM2 (P = 0.004 for both receptors) compared with Ki-67 and MCM2 levels in specimens with low EGFR or HER-2 expression (score = 0/1). Furthermore, the highest levels of Ki-67and MCM2 expression were seen when both EGFR and HER-2 were overexpressed, suggesting a potential synergistic effect (Table 3).
Comparison of marker expression in intrasubject samples of differing histologic grade. We hypothesized that if alterations in the expression of any of these markers were specifically associated with histologic change, then their expression levels would be significantly higher when comparing biopsies of the highest-grade with the lowest-grade lesions from each subject. We investigated this hypothesis by testing for an association between the difference in histologic grade and the difference in levels of marker expression for the worst and best biopsies within the same subject. Results from this analysis for EGFR and HER-2 are shown in Table 4. A progressive trend toward increased expression of HER-2 and Ki-67 when comparing subjects who had a spectrum of differences in histologic grade ranging from 1 to 7 was found, although this did not quite reach statistical significance for HER-2 (P = 0.07, HER-2, Table 4; P < 0.001, Ki-67, data not shown). This association was not present for expression of EGFR or MCM2 (P = 0.74, EGFR, Table 4; P = 0.59, MCM2, data not shown). The combination of an absence of an association in Table 4 and a significant association in Table 1 implies that expression of these latter two markers was influenced by the worst histology in the airways of the subject regardless of the histologic appearance of the tissue used for analysis.
| Discussion |
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Interaction between EGFR and HER-2 in the induction of a proliferative state in bronchial dysplasia has not been investigated previously, and our results suggesting potential synergy between EGFR and HER-2 in epithelium with concomitant overexpression of both of these receptors may have important clinical implications. A recent report from our group has shown that, in nonsmall cell lung cancer patients treated with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor of EGFR (gefitinib), the presence of increased HER-2 gene copy number is associated with significantly better objective response, disease control rate, and time to progression and a strong trend toward longer overall survival in patients with EGFR-positive tumors (39). Taken together, our results suggest that chemopreventive effects via inhibition of EGFR activity in bronchial dysplasia may be most successful in patients with dual overexpression of EGFR and HER-2, a frequent finding in our analysis of these lesions.
A further characteristic of EGFR expression revealed in our analysis provides insight regarding the stimulus for increased expression of this receptor. A comparison of EGFR expression levels between worst and best histologic biopsies from within individual subjects showed that significant increases in expression of EGFR could not be shown in association with increased differences in histologic grade. This result indicates that levels of EGFR expression are most influenced by the worst histology in the airways of a given patient regardless of the histologic appearance of the bronchial epithelium in which EGFR expression is measured. We propose that a field effect occurs in patients at higher risk for the development of premalignant and invasive lesions of the airways and that increased EGFR expression may be a central molecular alteration associated with this effect. This observation suggests a potential role for an EGFR-mediated proliferative state in permitting the development of increasingly dysplastic lesions with their associated increased risk for subsequent progression to invasive carcinoma.
HER-2 expression has only been assessed in bronchial dysplasia in one previous study. This previous work suggested that HER-2 expression was increased in dysplasia compared with nondysplastic bronchial epithelium, although the numbers of specimens studied were not adequate to show a statistically significant difference (40). Our results did not show an association between HER-2 levels and degree of dysplastic change, but the P for this relationship (0.102) was only slightly more than twice the value used to determine statistical significance. Although normal bronchial tissue seems to have slightly lower levels of HER-2 expression than the remaining histologic classes (group 2, basal cell hyperplasia; group 8, invasive carcinoma; Table 1), these latter lesions all show very similar, high levels of HER-2 expression. In contrast, EGFR maintains a trend toward higher levels of expression with increased histologic class when evaluating groups 2 to 8. Because basal cell hyperplasia and squamous metaplasia without dysplastic change are considered to be reactive lesions without associated increased risk for the development of lung cancer, these observations suggest that HER-2 expression is not a specific marker of premalignant change in the airways and may not be central to the development of these lesions. Despite these findings, our results suggesting a potential synergy between EGFR and HER-2 with respect to associated increased expression of proliferation markers could indicate that, in the presence of EGFR overexpression, increased levels of HER-2 may contribute to epithelial proliferation in bronchial dysplasia.
Angiogenic activity was not directly quantified in our study, but analysis of EGFR and HER-2 expression in ASDs was done. Although some recent publications have shown an association between activation of EGFR and induction of vascular endothelial growth factormediated angiogenic activity (17), we did not find any significant differences in the expression of EGFR or HER-2 between ASDs and non-ASD lesions of similar levels of dysplasia. Given that recent work by our group has shown increased levels of vascular endothelial growth factor expression in ASD (41), more quantitative analyses and in-depth characterization of receptor signaling pathway activation may be needed to determine whether EGFR or HER-2 is involved in the induction of angiogenesis in these lesions. A previous finding that is confirmed by our data is the demonstration of an association between EGFR expression and induction of epithelial proliferation in these dysplasias (31, 35, 39, 42, 43). Although increased proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression in association with EGFR expression has been reported, our data extend the demonstration of an association between EGFR expression and increased epithelial proliferation to include induction of the proliferation markers Ki-67 and MCM2. More importantly, we show for the first time (a) a direct correlation between levels of EGFR expression and degree of dysplasia, (b) a field effect in the induction of EGFR expression in the airways of subjects with bronchial dysplasia, and (c) a potential synergistic effect on epithelial proliferation in lesions with increased expression of both EGFR and HER-2. These findings suggest that EGFR plays a prominent role in the development and progression of bronchial dysplasia and could provide a promising target for chemoprevention of lung cancer.
| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 10/21/05; revised 1/ 6/06; accepted 1/18/06.
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