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Pharmcogenetics in oncology Pierre Laurent-Puig INSERM, U775 Molecular basis of xenobiotic response AP-HP Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou Molecular Oncology and Pharmacogenetic laboratory Quic kTime™ et un déc ompres seur TIFF (non compress é) s ont requis pour visionner c ette image. Introduction • Multiple active regimens for cancer but: – Variation in response rate to the different regimen – Unpredictable toxicity for the different regimens • With choice came the time to decision – Need to the development of tools which help clinicians Pharmacogenetics Anticancer drugs Genetic factors Environmental factors Variations in drug response or toxicity Transport Metabolism Drug target Drug interactions Lee et al. Oncologist. 2005;10:104-111. Cell Introduction • Pharmacogenetics : the science of incorporating information of inherited genetic variability into predicting treatment response. • Polymorphisms in both individual’s genome as well as tumor genome will affect drug toxicity and drug response. • Drug-related toxicity will be predicted mainly by genotyping non tumour tissues. • Drug response will be predicted both genotyping non tumour and tumour tissues. by 5-FU Pathway Capecitabine FBAL Carboxyl esterase -ureidopropionase 5’dFCR Cytidine deaminase FUPA 5’dFUR DNA (Uracil misincorporation) Thymidine phosphorylase Tegafur 5F-uridine Uridine phosphorylase Dihydropyrimidinase 80%-90% 5-FU DHFU Thymidine phosphorylase 5F-deoxyuridine Orotate phosphoribosyl transferase Uridine kinase dUTP Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase Thymidine kinase 5-FUMP Uridine monophosphate kinase 5-FUDP Uridine diphosphate kinase 5-FUTP dUTPase dTMP FdUDP Ribonucleotide reductase dUMP FdUTP dTDP Uridine diphosphate kinase dTTP DNA Methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase dUTPase 5, 10-MTHF Serine hydroxymethyl transferase Thymidylate synthase FdUMP Uridine monophosphate kinase dUDP 5-MTHF THF DHF Folinic acid (leucovorin) Dihydrofolate reductase DPD and 5-FU toxicity • IVS14+1G>A Polymorphism leads to the skipping of exon 14. • As a result, the mature DPD mRNA lacks a 165 nucleotide segment encoding amino acids 581–635 • Prevalence of IVS14+1G>A 0.75% to 2.2% van Kuilenburg et al. Eur J Cancer. 2004;40:939-950. 5-FU Toxicity and the Prevalence of IVS14 + 1G>A Mutations Total group DPD ≤ 70% DPD > 70% Patients (n = 60) Heterozygotes Homozygotes 16 (27%) 1 (2%) 15 (42%) 1 (3%) 1 (4%) 0 Patients (n = 25) Heterozygotes Homozygotes 5 (20%) 1 (4%) n.d. n.d. n.d. n.d. IVS14 + 1G>A • 24-29% of patients with grade 3-4 5-FU toxicity were heterozygous or homozygous for the IVS14 + 1G>A mutation • Almost half of the patients with decreased DPD activity were carriers of the IVS14 + 1G>A mutation • Applying Bayes’ theorem we can estimate the risk of 5-FU grade 3-4 toxicity for a carrier of IVS14+1G>A mutation to 87% van Kuilenburg et al. Eur J Cancer. 2004;40:939-950; van Kuilenburg et al. Pharmacogenetics. 2002;12:555-558; Raida et al. Clin Cancer Res. 2001;7:2832-2839. 5-FU Toxicity and the Prevalence of DYPD polymorphism 14 IVS14 + 1G>A Exon 14 skipping; 2846A>T, D949V; 1679T>G,I560S Sensitivity, specificity, and PPV and NPV of the detection of these three major SNPs as toxicity predictive factors were 0.31, 0.98, and 0.62 and 0.94, respectively. Morel A. Mol Cancer Ther 2006:5:2895-904. TS Polymorphisms Functional consequences Polymorphisms • One in the enhancer region of TS consisting • In vitro studies demonstrated that an increasing in a double or triple repeat of a 28-base pair number of tandem repeats leads to an increase in sequence (2R or 3R) TS gene expression and TS enzyme activity • G>C SNP in the second of the three 28-bp • The SNP in the second repeat of the 3R allele disrupts repeats produces two additional alleles (3RG the upstream stimulatory factor (USF) consensus or 3RC) element and therefore decreases the in vitro • One in the 3’UTR region consisting of an transcriptional activation of TS insertion or a deletion of 6 bp • Desai et al. Oncogene. 2003;22:6621-6628. The TS 3’UTR del6 allele may determine low TS mRNA stability and low TS expression in comparison with TS 3’UTR ins 6 allele N = 86 CRC patients 5-FU based chemotherapy • TS promoter genotype is predictive of grade 3/4 toxicities with 5-FU • 3R/3R genotype, overexpressing TS, has fewer toxicities • No association with a response to 5-FU and survival Grade 3 / 4 toxicities (%) 5-FU Toxicity (all) and Polymorphism of TS Gene Promoter in CRC 50 43 %(6/14) 40 30 18 % (8/44) 20 10 4 % (1/28) 0 2R/2R (16%) 2R/3R (49%) P = 0.02 Lecomte et al. Clin Cancer Res. 2004;10:5880-5888. * 2R/2R vs 2R/3R, 3R/3R 3R/3R (31%) MTHFR Polymorphisms A222V E428A • Two polymorphisms may alter enzyme activity – 677C->T (Ala222Val) increases MTHFR thermolability – 1298A->T (Glu428Ala) decreases MTHFR activity • Since a loss in MTHFR enzymatic activity may favor an increase in intracellular CH2FH4 concentrations, it can be hypothesized that tumors exhibiting mutated MTHFR genotypes may be more sensitive to 5-FU cytotoxicity. MTHFR Polymorphisms & Clinical Outcomes References 5-FU Dosage Sample size Finding Cohen et al. Clin Cancer Res 2003 Different regimen of p.o or i.v. 5-FU 43 Significant increase response rate for pts with at least one 222 mutant allele Etienne et al. Pharmacogenetics 2004 Different regimen of i.v. 5-FU 98 Significant increase response rate for pts homozygous for 222 mutant allele Jakobsen et al. J Clin Oncol 2005 Diffenrent regimen of i.v. 5-FU 88 Significant increase response rate for pts homozygous for 222 mutant allele MTHFR and 5-FU response Responder Non responder OR [95% CI]* A222A 37 (39%) 57 1 ref A222V 29 (31%) 64 0.7 [0.36-1.3] V222V 21 (62.5%) 11 2.94 [1.18-7.53] 219 patients with advanced colorectal cancer receiving 5-FU *unadjusted OR Cohen et al. Clin Cancer Res 2003;9:1611-1615; Etienne et al. Pharmacogenetics 2004;14:785-792; Jakobsen et al. J Clin Oncol. 2005;23:1365-1369. Two types of colorectal cancer Tumor LOH + (85%) Tumor MSI + (15%) •Hyperploid •Diploid •Recurrent allelic losses on chromosomes 17p, 18q, 5q, 8p, 22q •No allelic losses on chromosome 17p, 18q, 5q, 8p, 22q •Frequent p53 and APC gene mutations •Rare p53 and APC gene mutations •Frequent KRAS and PIK3CA gene mutations •Frequent BRAF and PIK3CA gene mutations •Up to 20 different genes were found mutated •Mainly in distal colon •Frequent mutation of TGFß receptor type II, Caspase 5, Bax and TCF4 genes •Alteration of MLH1 MSH2, MSH6 and MSH3 genes •Mainly in proximal colon Chromosomal instability Genetic instability Paradigm: FAP tumors owing to germline Paradigm: HNPCC tumors owing to mutation of APC gene germline mutation of MMR genes Treatment Role of MSI status in adjuvant 5FU treatment response Control MSS tumours Control MSI tumours Treatment A significant interaction was observed between microsatellite instability status and the benefit of treament p=0.01 Ribic et al N Engl J Med 2003; 349:247-57. Irinotecan Pathway P-gp CPT-11 CPT-11 ABCB1 CES2 CYP3A4 APC CPT-11 CYP3A5 SN-38 NPC CES2 ABCB1 SN-38 UGT1A1 SN-38G P-gp SN-38 TOPI death UGT1A1 promoter polymorphisms Promoter Exons UGT1A1 Variant (TA)7 TAA (TA)6 TAA Decrease gene expression Normal gene expression Low glucuronidation leads to 1.8 to 3.9 fold lower glucuronidation of SN-38 Normal glucuronidation Iyer et al. Pharmacogenomics J. 2002;2:43-47. Published Data on UGT1A1 & grade 4 neutropenia n/N (%) Author 7/7 95% CI 21/58 (36%) -- -- Carlini 0/6 Innocenti 3/6 (50%) 3/53 (6%) 16.7 2.3 – 120.6 Marcuelloa 1/10 (10%) 2/85 (2%) 4.6 0.4 – 56.0 Rouits 4/7 (57%) 10/66 (15%) 7.5 1.4 – 38.5 Andob 4/7 (57%) 22/111 (20%) 5.4 1.1 – 25.9 aOriginally (0%) 6/6 + 6/7 Est. Odds Ratio reported Gr 3+ Gr 4 values from personal communication. bGr 4 leukopenia and/or Gr 3+ diarrhea. UGT1A1 promoter genotype and Irinotecan toxicity (in combination) • • 400 patients with high risk stage III colorectal cancer included in a randomised trial FNCLCC Accord02 / FFCD9802 comparing LV5FU2 alone versus Folfiri regimen. FOLFIRI regimen – Irinotecan 180mg/m2, 90 min iv day 1 – Leucovorin 200mg/m2 during irinotecan day 1 – 5FU 400mg/m2 iv bolus followed by 2400mg/m2, during 46 hours • Clinical evaluation – Toxicity – Survival • UGT1A1 TA6/TA7 and -3156 G->A polymorphisms were studied in 94 patients receiving FOLFIRI Hematological toxicity grade 3-4 according to UGT1A1 genotypes TA6>TA7 -3156G>A 100% 100% 80% 80% 60% 60% 40% 40% 20% 20% 0% (TA6)2 TA6TA7 Toxicity >3 (TA7)2 Toxicity 0-2 p=0.15 0% GG GA Toxicity >3 AA Toxicity 0-2 p=0.02 Survival without grade 3-4 hematological toxicity (-3156G>A) Proportion of patient without hematological grade 3-4 toxicity 1 0.8 GG 0.6 AG AA 0.4 0.2 p=0.012 0 0 2 Côté et al. Clinical Cancer Res accepted 4 6 8 Number of cycles 10 12 Response to chemotherapy WHO and UGT1A1 *28 polymorphism (n=238) UGT1A1 CR PR SD PD R Risk for PD OR 95%CI Risk for PD+SD OR 95%CI 6/6 N=109 10 34 39 36 40.3% 1 1 6/7 N=108 5 40 32 31 41.6% 0.77 [0.4-1.4] 0.92 [0.5-1.6] 7/7 N=21 3 11 5 2 66.6% 0.19 [0.04-0.9] 0.32 [0.12-0.56] Toffoli presentation the ASCO GI Meeting in January 2006 Oxaliplatin Pathway Platinum Extracellular Cell membrane Intracellular ABCG2 ABCC2 Platinum Detoxify GSTP1 Platinum Translesional replication Platinum Pt G Platinum G ERCC1 Damage recognition XPA XRCC1 ERCC2 Mismatch repair Excision repair Cell death GSTP1 Polymorphisms I105V A114V • Two non synonymous coding polymorphisms – Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at residue 105 Ile105Val substitution (39%) – Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at residue 114 Ala114Val (12%) – Four haplotypes *A Ile105+Ala114; *B Val105+Ala114; *C Val105+Val114; *D Ile105+Val114 • Variability in enzymatic activities depending of the substrate • Lower thermal stability for the 105 Val allele Variability in detox properties according to the haplotypes Ishimoto TM, Ali-Osman F. Pharmacogenetics 2002;12:543-553. GSTP1 Polymorphisms & Clinical Outcomes References Chemotherapy regimen Sample size Finding GSTP1 and neurotoxicity Lecomte et al. Clin Cancer Res 2006 Accepted Grothey et al. A3509 ASCO 2005 FOLFOX regimens FOLFOX regimen 64 Early neurotoxicity occurs more frequently in pts homozygous for wild type allele 288 Early neurotoxicity occurs more frequently in pts with at least one Val Allele 107 Better prognosis for patients with mutant allele GSTP1 and survival Stoehlmacher et al. JNCI 2004 Combination of 5FU and Oxaliplatin GSTP1, Oxaliplatin and survival 107 patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who received 5-FU/oxal VAL/VAL (n=10) ILE/VAL (n=45) ILE/ILE (n=45) P < 0.001 After adjustment for performance status the relative risk of dying for patients with ILE/VAL and ILE/ILE genotypes was 2.73 and 3.25 respectively P = 0.072 Stoehlmacher et al. JNCI. 2002;94:936-941; Stoehlmacher et al. Br J Cancer. 2004;94: 944-954. ERCC1 polymorphism N118N • ERCC1 codes for a protein in the nucleotide excision repair pathway • High ERCC1 level is associated with resistance to oxaliplatin • Polymorphism in codon 118 is silent • 118 TT genotype is associated with reduced translation of the gene, and presumably reduced DNA repair capability (ovarian cancer cell lines). But in colon cancer, patients with ERCC1 118 TT genotype have a higher expression of ERCC1 mRNA. ERCC1 Polymorphisms & Clinical Outcomes 2 studies with conflicting results: – Stoehlmacher et al. Br J Cancer 2004;94: 944-54 • 107 metastatic colorectal cancer patients receiving oxaliplatin plus 5FU • Relative risk of dying was 2.05, 95%CI [1.00-4.20] for CT and TT genotypes as compared to CC genotype patients – Viguier et al. Clin Cancer Res 2005;11:6212-7 • 61 metastatic colorectal cancer patients receiving FOLFOX regimen • The objective response rate was 21.4% , 42.3% and 61.9% for CC, CT and TT genotypes Summary Polymorphism TS Genotype or Allele Frequency Toxicity Efficacy Comments 3R/3R 30 to 40% Lower Lower? 2R/2R 18 to 25% Higher Higher? Exact role of 3RG and 3RC allele, role of allelic losses in tumor DNA Role of TS haplotype IVS14+1G> A 0.5 to 2% Higher 222: Val/Val 4 to 6% Higher 428: Ala/Ala 6 to 8% Higher 7/7 10% Higher Higher or Equivalent Role of other polymorphisms 105: Val/Val 15 to 20% Higher Lower 105: Ala/Ala 35 to 40% Higher Contradictory on toxicity 118: CC 38 to 42% 5-FU DPD MTHFR Irino UGT1A1 GSTP1 Oxali ERCC1 118: TT 10 to 15% Promoter methylation of DPD Better survival Better response Role of haplotype Contradictory for efficacy EGFR pathways EGF ligands TGF Dimerisation membrane EGFR TK TK TK P Phosphorylation = P Activation angiogenesis proliferation Resistance to apoptosis VEGF, IL8 Cycline D1 Bad, caspase 9 Ras/MAPK pathways membrane TK TK P Grb hSos Ras GTP P Intracellular phosphorylation cascade (Raf, Erk, Mek) = MAP Kinases cycline D1 cdk6 P MEK ERK P ERK P Serine/Threonine Kinases C-MYC, JUNB, c-JUN MEK Raf c-fos P ERK P phase G1 cell cycle nucleus PI3K/Akt pathways Phosphatidyl-inositol membrane PI 3,4,5-P3 TK TK P P P PI3K Pdk1 Pdk2 PI3K Akt Akt P P Activation of eIF-4E inhibition of 4E-BP1 S6 kinase Bad, caspase-9, Fkhrl-1 P Gsk3 P Stabilisation of Cyclin D1 Protein synthesis Resistance to apoptosis Cell cycle G1 transition Response to Cetuximab • 30 patients treated by cetuximab for a stage IV colorectal cancer – 3 in first line with folfiri – 3 in second line – 24 in third line • 11 responders (1 with complete response ) • Sequencing of KRAS (ex1), BRAF (ex11&15), PIK3CA (ex1,ex2, ex9, ex11) • Measure of EGFR amplification by CISH (F.Penault-Llorca) Lievre et al. Can Res 2006;66:3992-5 Prevalence of alterations • KRAS is mutated in 13 cases (48%) – 10 cases at codon 12 – 3 cases at codon 13 • PIK3CA is mutated in 2 cases (7%) – 2 cases in exon 9 – these 2 tumours are also mutated for KRAS • BRAF is not mutated • EGFR is amplified in 3 cases – >20 copies in 1 case – >10 copies in 2 cases Response rate to cetuximab therapy according to KRAS mutation 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% Non responders patients responder patients P=0.0003 non mutated KRAS Mutated KRAS 6 13 11 0 Lievre et al. Can Res 2006;66:3992-5 Overall survival according to KRAS mutation for patients treated with cetuximab Lievre et al. Can Res 2006;66:3992-5 Conclusions •Molecular predictive factors of response to chemotherapy for colorectal cancer patients have been identified •From the host or from the tumor •From different pathways –Xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme , Drug target •It is time to study more than one predictive factor at the same time in order to choose the best – The development of “omic” approaches will allow the “a la carte” treatment of cancer patient with the most efficient and the less toxic drugs