scholarly journals O-L09 Determining the Prognostic Utility of Immuno-histochemically detected Trans-membranous Human Equilibriative Nucleoside Transporter 1 (hENT1) in Patients Undergoing Hilar Cholangiocarcinoma Resection

2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Bird ◽  
Nichola Manu ◽  
Mark QuinnL ◽  
Rafa Diaz-Nieto ◽  
Stephen Fenwick ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Human equilibriative nucleoside transporter protein 1 (hENT1) is a trans-membranous protein which facilitates nucleoside transport in to the cell. Immunohistochemically-detected hENT1 abundance is increased in cholangiocarcinoma tumour cells compared to matched non-tumour cells and increased in highly metabolising cells. The privately-held Mackey 10D7G2 hybridoma has demonstrated prognostic utility in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma patients. The commercially available Proteintech Polyclonal hENT1 antibody’s prognostic utility has not been previously assessed. Cellular Ki67 expression has been linked to mitotic indices of tumour proliferation. This proof-of-concept study aims to assess the antibodies prognostic utility for hilar cholangiocarcinoma patients undergoing surgical resection. Methods Between February 2009 and February 2016 54 patients underwent resection for peri-hilar cholangiocarcinoma. Formalin-Fixed Paraffin Embedded (FFPE) blocks from a sub-set of 44 resected specimens were retrieved. Appropriate areas of tumour were sampled from the blocks and a Tissue-Matched Array (TMA) was constructed. The TMA underwent staining for each antibody. H-scores were utilised to determine intensity of expression. Correlation of expression between antibodies was determined by Pearson correlation co-efficient and Chi-squared where appropriate. Silencing RNA transfected HepG2 cell-lines was used to determine hENT1 staining by the Proteintech antibody. Demographic and survival characteristics for the patients were acquired from a prospectively held database linked to Hospital Episode Statistics. Survival characteristics were calculated with global log-rank calculations. Results There was significant correlation between the Mackey 10D7G2 and the Proteintech antibodies (p < 0.001). There was significant correlation between the Proteintech hENT1 antibody expression and Ki67 expression (p = 0.02). Knockdown of hENT1 with silencing RNA transfected HepG2 cells was confirmed by Western blot in a time-dependent fashion over 72 hours. The antibodies (Mackey; Proteintech; Ki67) did not achieve significance for predicting OS (p = 0.75; 0.63; 0.22 respectively). Nodal stage (p = 0.03) and grade of tumour differentiation (p = 0.02) were the univariate tumour variables with prognostic utility. Conclusions While the Proteintech antibody demonstrates concordance with the 10D7G2 antibody in determining hENT1 expression the antibodies did not demonstrate significant prognostic ability in this proof-of-concept study. Standard histopathological co-variates retain prognostic utility within the cohort.

2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. TPS4146-TPS4146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela Lamarca ◽  
Prakash Manoharan ◽  
Marie-Claude Asselin ◽  
Ioannis Trigonis ◽  
Pamela Hindmarsh ◽  
...  

TPS4146 Background: Pancreatic cancer (PC) has one of the lowest 5-year survival rates. Gemcitabine (G)-based chemotherapy is standard-of-care first-line systemic therapy. Fluorine-18 radiolabelled 3-deoxy-3-fluorothymidine (FLT), a thymidine analogue, is a substrate for thymidine kinase 1 (TK1), which is highly expressed in proliferating cells in late G1/S phase. FLT uptake (imaged and quantified by positron emission tomography (PET)) correlates with pathology-based proliferation markers and with decreases with therapy in a number of cancers. G, a nucleoside analogue, decreases proliferation by inhibiting DNA synthesis, primarily acting on S and G1/S phase thus decreasing tumour FLT uptake. Human equilibrative nucleoside transporter (hENT1) transports G and FLT into cells, making hENT1 activity a key determinant of both FLT uptake and G efficacy. Methods: Two parallel proof-of-concept studies are designed to explore the feasibility of assessing proliferation, nucleoside transport, magnitude of treatment-related FLT uptake changes and understanding the pathophysiological basis of FLT-PET imaging in patients (pts) with (1) localized or (2) advanced PC. Up to 24 PC pts with ECOG PS 0-2, able to undergo imaging and with at least one potentially evaluable lesion larger than 2cm on CT/MRI are eligible. Pts with localized disease (study 1) will have dynamic FLT-PET pre-operatively preceded by a radiolabelled H2O PET scan to assess tumour perfusion. These pts will also undergo 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG)-PET and diffusion-weighted MR scans. For pts with metastatic disease (study 2), dynamic FLT-PET will be performed before and after G-based chemotherapy. FLT uptake expressed as a standardized uptake value (SUV), will be determined. Tumour pathological markers from the surgical samples and imaging parameters will be correlated; hENT1 status will be assessed (by immunohistochemistry) after surgery (study 1) and before treatment (study 2). Reproducibility FLT-PET studies will be performed in a cohort of subjects to assess the variability in uptake quantification.


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