|
Gene variation may elevate risk of liver tumor in patients
with cirrhosis
Growth factor pathway may be target for preventive
treatment
A particular gene variation appears to significantly
increase the risk that individuals with cirrhosis of the liver
will go on to develop hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a liver tumor
that is the third leading cause of cancer death. In the January
2 Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers
from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Cancer Center and colleagues
in France describe finding that a single alteration in the epidermal
growth factor (EFG) gene may greatly increase the risk of developing
HCC.
“If these results are confirmed, this EGF variation could be used to
determine which cirrhotic patients should be screened more intensively for
tumor development,” says Kenneth Tanabe, MD, chief of Surgical Oncology
at the MGH Cancer Center, the study’s lead author. “In addition,
the molecular pathway controlled by EGF and its receptor EGFR – which
is known to be important in several types of cancer – appears to be an
excellent target for chemoprevention studies. This is a deadly cancer
and so progress in prevention and early detection is critically important.”
HCC is the sixth most common solid tumor worldwide and most commonly
develops in individuals with cirrhosis, which may be caused by
infection with the hepatitis B or C viruses. There are currently
no effective treatments for most HCC patients, so there is considerable
interest in strategies that may prevent development of the tumor.
EGF’s normal function is to stimulate tissue growth. Animal
studies have shown that elevated levels of this protein in the
liver lead to tumor development and that blocking the protein’s
receptor can prevent development of liver cancer. The current
study was designed to determine whether cirrhotic patients with
higher EGF levels are at greater risk for liver cancer and to determine
the influence of a particular inherited gene on EGF levels in cirrhotic
patients.
The researchers focused on a known variation in the EGF gene – the
presence of the nucleotide guanine (G) instead of the more common
adenine (A) in a particular location – which has been shown
to increase EGF secretion in blood cells and raise the risk for
malignant melanoma. Individuals inherit one copy of the gene
from each parent and therefore have this gene with either two copies
of A (A/A), two copies of G (G/G), or one copy of each (A/G).
Genetic analysis of liver tumor cell lines showed that messenger
RNA transcribed from DNA strands with the G allele was more stable
that that transcribed from the A version, which could explain why
cells with two G copies tend to secrete higher levels of EGF.
The researchers then studied tissue samples from all patients in
the MGH Cancer Center Tumor Bank who had cirrhosis. Among
the 207 patients with cirrhosis, most of whom were infected with
the hepatitis C virus, 59 also had HCC. Patients with at
least one copy of the G nucleotide had a significantly higher risk
of developing HCC than did A/A patients – ranging from a
more than twofold increase for those with one G to an over fourfold
increase for those with two G alleles. In all three genotypes,
tissue analysis showed that EGF levels were highest in the G/G
patients, as was activation of the EGFR receptor. In addition,
blood levels of EGF were highest in those with two copies of the
G allele.
To confirm these finding in a different patient population, the
MGH team worked with colleagues from the Paul Brousse Hospital
in Paris. Samples from this group, all of whom had alcoholic
cirrhosis, also showed that patients with the G/G version of the
EGF gene had a significantly greater risk of developing the liver
tumor than did the A/A patients, in this instance an almost threefold
risk increase.
In both the MGH and French study groups, controlling for factors
such as age and gender did not change the increased risk associated
with the G allele. While both groups primarily consisted
of Caucasian patients, in the MGH group, it was noted that the
G allele was more common among Asian patients; and it is well known
that more than half the cases of HCC worldwide occur in China.
“We now need to prospectively study EGF levels in cirrhotic patients,
to see if elevated levels will correlate with a greater risk of developing
HCC, and look at factors such as diet, drugs or ethnicity that may modulate
EGF levels,” Tanabe says. “I think this is a terrific opportunity
to see if targeting a specific pathway will prevent HCC in this group of patients,
who are at risk for liver cancer because of their cirrhosis.” Tanabe
is an associate professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School.
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health, the MGH Department of Surgery, Tucker Gosnell Gastrointestinal
Cancer Center, and the Fund for Medical Discovery. Co-authors
of the JAMA article are Dianne Finkelstein, PhD, Hiroshi Kawasaki,
Tsutomu Fujii, MD, PhD, Raymond Chung, MD, Gregory Lauwers, MD,
Yakup Kulu, Alona Muzikansky, Darshini Kuruppu, PhD, Michael Lanuti,
MD, Jonathan Goodwin and Bryan Fuch, PhD, of the MGH; and Antoinette
Lemoine, MD, and Daniel Azoulay, MD, PhD, Paul Brousse Hospital,
Paris.
|