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Author's response to reviews Title: Let-7 miRNA-binding site polymorphism in the KRAS 3`UTR; colorectal cancer screening population prevalence and influence on clinical outcome in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer treated with 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin +/- cetuximab Authors: Janne B Kjersem ([email protected]) Tone Ikdahl ([email protected]) Tormod Guren ([email protected]) Eva Skovlund ([email protected]) Halfdan Sorbye ([email protected]) Julian Hamfjord ([email protected]) Per Pfeiffer ([email protected]) Bengt Glimelius ([email protected]) Christian Kersten ([email protected]) Hiroko Solvang ([email protected]) Kjell M Tveit ([email protected]) Elin H Kure ([email protected]) Version: 4 Date: 15 October 2012 Author's response to reviews: see over BMC Cancer BioMed Central 236 Gray`s Inn Road London WC1X 8HL United Kingdom Oslo 12th of October 2012 To the Editor, Reply to reviewers and the editors comments for Manuscript 1442908651768315 – Let-7 miRNA-binding site polymorphism in the KRAS 3`UTR; colorectal cancer screening population prevalence and influence on clinical outcome in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer treated with 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin +/cetuximab We are thankful to both reviewers and the editors for the comprehensive review of our manuscript and helpful feedback. A revised manuscript has been prepared based on the comments of the reviewers and the editorial board. Please find the comments addressed individually below: Reviewer 1 Although these are interesting data, the authors should be aware that the mode of presentation is not reasonable as the results represent negative findings (which are also important to report). Thus the authors have to write what they actually found: No significant differences for the groups. We recognize that the mode of the presentation of our negative findings were misleading and have therefore made several changes throughout the manuscript. They are addressed below. “Numerically increased PFS and OS were found in patients with the LCS6 variant allele (8.5 versus 7.8 months, P=0.16 and 23.5 versus 19.5 months, P=0.31, respectively).” This message is rather misleading – as the study did not reveal significant differences (P=0.16, P=0.31) – so the authors have to state this in a proper meaning. Under Results in the Abstract the sentence: “Numerically increased PFS and OS were found in patients with the LCS6 variant allele (8.5 versus 7.8 months, P=0.16 and 23.5 versus 19.5 months, P=0.31, respectively)” has been replaced by the following sentence on page 2, lines 57-62: “No statistically significant differences were demonstrated in the NORDIC-VII cohort even if numerically increased progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were found in patients with the LCS6 variant allele (8.5 (95% CI: 7.3-9.7 months) versus 7.8 months (95% CI: 7.4-8.3 months), P=0.16 and 23.5 (95% CI: 21.6-25.4 months) versus 19.5 months (95% CI: 17.8-21.2 months), P=0.31, respectively).” “Addition of cetuximab improved response rate more in variant carriers than in wild-type carriers (from 35% to 57% versus 44% to 47%. Interaction P=0.16)”. Again there was no significant difference (P=0.16). The authors have to state these “negative findings” more clearly throughout the whole manuscript before the paper should be considered for acceptance. Under Results in the Abstract the sentence: “Addition of cetuximab improved response rate more in variant carriers than in wild type carriers (from 35% to 57% versus 44% to 47%. Interaction P=0.16)” has been replaced by the following sentence on page 2, lines 62-65: “Addition of cetuximab seemed to improve response rate more in variant carriers than in wild-type carriers (from 35% to 57% versus 44% to 47%), however the difference was not statistically significant (interaction P = 0.16).” Under Conclusions in the Abstract the sentence: “The LCS6 variant allele may be a prognostic factor and predict response to cetuximab in mCRC patients treated with 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin.” has been changed to the following sentence on page 2, lines 67-69: “No statistically significant effect of the LCS6 variant allele on response rate, PFS or OS was found in mCRC patients treated with 1st line 5-fluorouracil-oxaliplatin +/- cetuximab.” The sentence: ”The LCS6 variant did not appear as a risk factor for CRC” under Conclusions in the Abstract has been with replaced with ”The LCS6 variant allele does not seem to be a risk factor for development of colorectal polyps or CRC.” on page 2, lines 66-67. Results Under the heading: “Predictive analyses for benefit of cetuximab treatment”, the sentence: “Addition of cetuximab to FLOX improved response more in patients with the LCS6 variant (35% in arm A versus 57% in arms B and C) than in wildtype carriers (44% in arm A versus 47% in arms B and C), but the difference did not reach statistical significance (interaction P = 0.16, Figure 3).” has been replaced by the following sentence on page 8, lines 246-249: “Addition of cetuximab to FLOX seemed to improve treatment response more in patients with the LCS6 variant (35% in arm A versus 57% in arms B and C) than in wild-type carriers (44% in arm A versus 47% in arms B and C), but the difference was not statistically significant (interaction P = 0.16, Figure 3).” Discussion The sentences: “Although not statistically significant, numerically increased median PFS and OS were found in patients with the LCS6 variant allele when compared to LCS6 wild-type carriers. This finding may indicate that mCRC patients with the variant allele belong to a favorable prognostic group” have been removed and replaced by the following sentence on page 9, lines 274-278: “Numerically increased median PFS and OS were found in patients with the LCS6 variant allele when compared to LCS6 wild-type carriers, but the differences were not statistically significant at the 5% level and we cannot conclude that mCRC patients with the variant allele belong to a favorable prognostic group.” The sentence: “The trend of numerically increased PFS and OS and response rate was also observed independent of KRAS mutation status and in KRAS and BRAF wild-type patients.” has been modified on page 9, lines 282-284 to: “The trend of numerically increased PFS, OS and response rate was also observed independent of KRAS mutation status and in KRAS and BRAF wild-type patients, but none of the findings proved statistically significant.” The following sentence has been added on page 9, lines 285-288: “Thus, any potential predictive effect of LCS6 is likely to be too small to be demonstrated with the patient sample available from the NORDIC-VII study.” The following two sentences have been removed: “Our findings may indicate that the LCS6 variant allele is favorable in respect of clinical outcome when cetuximab is added on to Nordic FLOX in the first line treatment of mCRC patients.” and “However, these results should be interpreted with caution.” Conclusions The sentence: “The LCS6 variant allele does not seem to be a risk factor for development of colorectal polyps or CRC.” has been added on page 10, lines 328-329. The sentences: “Our findings may indicate that mCRC patients with the LCS6 variant allele belong to a favorable prognostic group. Also, the LCS6 variant allele may increase the probability of response when cetuximab is given in combination with Nordic FLOX in the first-line treatment of mCRC patients” have been replaced by the following sentences on page 10, lines 329-332: “No prognostic effect of the LCS6 variant allele was demonstrated in the NORDIC-VII cohort. No predictive effect of the LCS6 variant allele on response rate, PFS or OS when cetuximab is given in combination with 5-fluorouracil-oxaliplatin in the first-line treatment of mCRC patients could be proven.” The authors should also include – at least in the discussion section of the manuscript – some additional, more recently published studies with regard to microRNAs and their potential as biomarkers/resistance mediators in EGFRinhibitor treated colorectal cancer patients. The meaning of these findings should be carefully discussed in the context of their own results. These citations should include: 1. Mekenkamp et al: “Beyond KRAS mutation status: influence of KRAS copy number status and microRNAs on clinical outcome to cetuximab in metastatic colorectal cancer patients.” BMC Cancer 2012. 2. Pichler et al: “Down-regulation of KRAS-interaction miRNA-143 predicts poor prognosis but not response to EGFR-targeted agents in colorectal cancer.” British Journal of Cancer 2012. 3. Ruzzo et al: “Role of KRAS let-7 LCS6 SNP in metastatic colorectal cancer patients.” Annals of Oncology 2011. 4. Ragusa et al: “Specific alterations of microRNA transcriptome and global network structure in colorectal carcinoma after cetuximab treatment.” Molecular Cancer Therapeutics 2010. We added the following sentence in the Background section on page 3, lines 100-102: “A number of miRNAs have been reported to be involved in CRC development and KRAS regulation, and these may influence the effect of EGFRtargeted therapy [13,16,17].” (Mekenkamp et al, Pichler et al, and Ragusa et al) Mekenkamp et al We included the article by Mekenkamp et al in the Background section as we found the article to be most relevant here. We added the following paragraph on page 3, lines 87-94: “It was recently reported that copy number aberrations (CNA) may provide additional information to mutation status and their use may potentially further improve the selection of mCRC patients for EGFR targeted therapy [13]. Mekenkamp et al demonstrated that KRAS copy number loss was associated with good response in both KRAS wild-type and KRAS mutated mCRC patients treated with a cetuximab-containing first-line regimen [13]. KRAS copy number gains were associated with poor progression-free survival (PFS) in KRAS wild-type mCRC patients given the same treatment [13].” Pichler et al We also included the article by Pichler et al in the Background section as we found the article to be most relevant here. We added the following paragraph on page 3, lines 102-107: “An important miRNA in CRC seems to be miR-143, which, has been described to be down regulated in CRC [18] and to inhibit the translation of KRAS mRNA, thereby altering RAS signaling and inhibiting tumor cell growth [19]. Pichler et al found that low miR-143 expression was an independent negative prognostic factor for cancer specific survival in mCRC, and they reported a decreased PFS in KRAS wild-type mCRC patients treated with EGFR-targeted agents [16].” Ruzzo et al The article by Ruzzo et al has been cited in the Discussion section on pages 9 and 10, lines 300-304: “The conflicting results in these studies suggest that the chemotherapy backbone may play a role, and that the LCS6 variant allele has different predictive values in mCRC patients treated with cetuximab alone or in combination with 5-fluorouracil-oxaliplatin than in patients treated with cetuximab in combination with irinotecan [41,42].” Ragusa et al We added the following paragraph in the Discussion section on page 10, lines 306-317: “Ragusa et al demonstrated that cetuximab treatment induced miRNA transcriptome changes in drug-sensitive and drug-resistant CRC cell lines [17]. The set of differentially expressed miRNAs in the two cell lines (one sensitive and the other resistant) was almost entirely not overlapping. These data suggest that different responses to cetuximab are associated with different sets of miRNAs and thereby different molecular signaling. Interestingly, 67% of the differentially expressed miRNAs were involved in cancer, including CRC, whereas 19 miRNA targets had previously been reported to be involved in the cetuximab pathway and CRC. Based on their result, they suggest down regulation of let-7b and let-7e and the up regulation of miR-17* to be associated with cetuximab resistance [17]. Although these miRNAs were generated from cell studies, they illustrate that miRNAs may be promising predictive markers of cetuximab response to be further studied in mCRC patients.” Reviewer 2 The authors should delve more into the different results from the prior studies, one used irinotecan in combination with cetuximab, and actually Zhang had the same results of a separate cohort using this same combination, showing that LCS6 patients receiving cetuximab plus irinotecan did worse than those getting irinotecan alone. Therefore, it should not be assumed that this is due to sample size. In contrast it could really be due to chemotherapy backbone. This should be more directly discussed. The Zhang study that provided cetuximab delivered it alone. Your study is the first reporting on FLOX, and suggests that this may be a promising agent for these patients, as they appear to do better. This should be discussed. The paragraph “Our results are consistent with the results of Zhang et al who studied the association of the LCS6 variant allele and clinical outcome in KRAS wild-type mCRC patients enrolled in a study of salvage cetuximab monotherapy [24]. Contrary to our results, a smaller Italian study [23] on mCRC patients who underwent salvage cetuximab – irinotecan therapy, demonstrated that patients with the variant allele had shorter PFS and OS compared to wild-type. Possible explanations for conflicting results could be small sample sizes, different chemotherapy backbone, prior treatment and line of therapy.” has been replaced by the following paragraph on pages 9-10, lines 292-304: “Zhang et al demonstrated that of 67 KRAS wild-type mCRC patients, there was a higher response rate and a trend of longer PFS and OS in patients with LCS6 variant allele (N=12) compared to patients with LCS6 wild-type (N=55) when treated with cetuximab monotherapy [34]. Contrary, another study on 121 BRAF wild-type mCRC patients who underwent salvage cetuximab – irinotecan therapy, of which 58 were KRAS mutated, reported that patients with LCS6 variant allele (N=34) had shorter PFS and OS compared to LCS6 wild-type (N=87) [33]. Similar results were reported by Winder et al who found mCRC patients with mutant KRAS and LCS6 variant allele to have shorter PFS when treated with irinotecan and cetuximab [35]. The conflicting results in these studies suggest that the chemotherapy backbone may play a role, and that the LCS6 variant allele have different predictive values in mCRC patients treated with cetuximab alone or in combination with 5-fluorouracil-oxaliplatin than in patients treated with cetuximab in combination with irinotecan [41,42].” We have added Table 3: “Progression-free survival and overall survival by LCS6 genotype and treatment” under “Predictive analyses for benefit of cetuximab treatment” in the Results section. The following sentence has been added on page 10, lines 319-325: “We have only investigated one miRNA binding site polymorphism in this study, representing a small piece in a large puzzle of polymorphisms in the miRNA pathway. Future research on miRNA pathway polymorphisms as potential prognostic and/or predictive markers in mCRC should ideally include an integrated approach using bioinformatical tools combined with biological data to get a comprehensive understanding of the role and functions of miRNA polymorphisms and cetuximab response.” The repeated comment that the relationship with ovarian cancer is not possible is incorrect. See two follow up publications explaining the issues with the metaanalysis (Ratner, Oncogene and Pilarski, PLOS One). The conclusion is that this marker is important in ovarian cancer, predicts poor outcome and response to platinum chemotherapy (which is relevant for your publication), and is a risk for high risk families. This must be corrected as your statements are incorrect. The LCS6 variant allele and reported cancer risks are now only referred to in the Background section as we did not find it necessary to refer to this twice. The following sentences in the Discussion section have therefore been removed: “The variant allele is associated with increased risk for NSCLC in moderate smokers [19] and triple negative breast cancer in premenopausal women [20]. The reported association between the variant allele and increased risk of ovarian cancer [21] was subsequently excluded by a meta-analysis [22].” The following paragraph in the Background section: “The LCS6 variant allele is associated triple-negative breast cancer [20] and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in moderate smokers [19]. The LCS6 variant allele was reported to be associated with increased risk of ovarian cancer [21]; however a subsequent meta-analysis excluded the possibility of an association between the variant allele and risk of ovarian cancer or of familial ovarian cancer [22].” has been replaced by the following paragraph on page 4, lines 119-131: “The LCS6 variant allele is associated with increased risk of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in moderate smokers [24], triple-negative breast cancer in premenopausal women [25], and ovarian cancer in BRCA negative women from hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome families [26]. Moreover, the LCS6 variant allele is enriched in BRCA negative double primary breast and ovarian cancer patients [27]. One study failed to find an association between the LCS6 variant allele and sporadic or familial ovarian cancer risk [28]. A recent study confirms the importance of the LCS6 variant allele in postmenopausal ovarian cancer patients and demonstrates that it is a biomarker of poor outcome in this disease, probably due to platinum resistance [29]. The LCS6 variant allele is also associated with reduced survival in oral cancers [30]. On the contrary, Smits et al found that early-stage CRC patients with the LCS6 variant allele had better outcome [31], whereas Ryan et al recently reported the LCS6 variant allele to be associated with reduced risk of mortality in late-stage CRC [32].” Editorial board Ethical Approval - Research involving human subjects (including human material or human data) that is reported in the manuscript must have been performed with the approval of an appropriate ethics committee. Research carried out on humans must be in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration (http://www.wma.net/en/30publications/10policies/b3/index.html). A statement to this effect must appear in the Methods section of the manuscript, including the name of the body, which gave approval, with a reference number where appropriate. Under the heading “NORDIC-VII” in the Materials and Methods section the following sentence has been added on page 5, lines 164-166: “The study was approved by the national ethics committees and governmental authorities in each country and was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.” Under the heading “KAM cohort” in the Materials and Methods section the following sentence has been added on page 6, lines 174-176: “The project was approved by the Ethics Committee REK South-East, Norway (Regional komite for medisinsk og helsefaglig forskningsetikk Sør-Øst).” Consent - Please state in the Methods section whether written informed consent for participation in the study was obtained from participants or, where participants are children, a parent or guardian. Under the heading “NORDIC-VII” in the Materials and Method section the following sentence has been added on page 5, line 166: “All patients provided written informed consent.” Under the heading “KAM cohort” in the Materials and Method section the following sentence has been added on page 6, lines 173-174: “All participants in the study provided written informed consent.” We hope our revised manuscript is acceptable for publication and look forward to hearing from you. Kind regards, Elin Kure Group Leader Molecular profiling of GI cancers Department of Genetics, Institute for Cancer Research Oslo University Hospital HF Radiumhospitalet, Postboks 4953 Nydalen 0424 Oslo, Norway Office Phone: +47 22 78 13 77 Mobile Phone: +47 909 155 78 E-mail: [email protected]