Introduction For energy production, cancer cells maintain a high rate of glycolysis instead of oxidative phosphorylation converting glucose into lactic acid. This metabolic shift is useful to survive in unfavorable microenvironments. We investigated whether a positive glycolytic profile (PGP) in gastric adenocarcinomas may be associated with unfavorable outcomes under an anticancer systemic therapy, including the anti-angiogenic ramucirumab. Materials and methods Normal mucosa (NM) and primary tumor (PT) of 40 metastatic gastric adenocarcinomas patients who received second-line paclitaxel-ramucirumab (PR) were analyzed for mRNA expression of the following genes: HK-1, HK-2, PKM-2, LDH-A, and GLUT-1. Patients were categorized with PGP when at least a doubling of mRNA expression (PT vs. NM) in all glycolytic core enzymes (HK-1 or HK-2, PKM-2, LDH-A) was observed. PGP was also related to TP53 mutational status. Results Mean LDH-A, HK-2, PKM-2 mRNA expression levels were significantly higher in PT compared with NM. 18 patients were classified as PGP, which was associated with significantly worse progression-free and overall survival times. No significant association was observed between PGP and clinical-pathologic features, including TP53 positive mutational status, in 28 samples. Conclusions Glycolytic proficiency may negatively affect survival outcomes of metastatic gastric cancer patients treated with PR systemic therapy. TP53 mutational status alone does not seem to explain such a metabolic shift.

Glycolytic competence in gastric adenocarcinomas negatively impacts survival outcomes of patients treated with salvage paclitaxel-ramucirumab / Ruzzo, A; Graziano, F; Bagaloni, I; Di Bartolomeo, M; Prisciandaro, M; Aprile, G; Ongaro, E; Vincenzi, B; Perrone, G; Santini, D; Fornaro, L; Vivaldi, C; Tomasello, G; Loupakis, F; Lonardi, S; Fassan, M; Valmasoni, M; Sarti, D; Lorenzini, P; Catalano, V; Bisonni, R; Del Prete, M; Collina, G; Magnani, M. - In: GASTRIC CANCER. - ISSN 1436-3291. - 23:6(2020), pp. 1064-1074. [10.1007/s10120-020-01078-0 EA MAY 2020]

Glycolytic competence in gastric adenocarcinomas negatively impacts survival outcomes of patients treated with salvage paclitaxel-ramucirumab

Perrone G;Santini D;
2020

Abstract

Introduction For energy production, cancer cells maintain a high rate of glycolysis instead of oxidative phosphorylation converting glucose into lactic acid. This metabolic shift is useful to survive in unfavorable microenvironments. We investigated whether a positive glycolytic profile (PGP) in gastric adenocarcinomas may be associated with unfavorable outcomes under an anticancer systemic therapy, including the anti-angiogenic ramucirumab. Materials and methods Normal mucosa (NM) and primary tumor (PT) of 40 metastatic gastric adenocarcinomas patients who received second-line paclitaxel-ramucirumab (PR) were analyzed for mRNA expression of the following genes: HK-1, HK-2, PKM-2, LDH-A, and GLUT-1. Patients were categorized with PGP when at least a doubling of mRNA expression (PT vs. NM) in all glycolytic core enzymes (HK-1 or HK-2, PKM-2, LDH-A) was observed. PGP was also related to TP53 mutational status. Results Mean LDH-A, HK-2, PKM-2 mRNA expression levels were significantly higher in PT compared with NM. 18 patients were classified as PGP, which was associated with significantly worse progression-free and overall survival times. No significant association was observed between PGP and clinical-pathologic features, including TP53 positive mutational status, in 28 samples. Conclusions Glycolytic proficiency may negatively affect survival outcomes of metastatic gastric cancer patients treated with PR systemic therapy. TP53 mutational status alone does not seem to explain such a metabolic shift.
2020
angiogenesis; glycolysis; paclitaxel; ramucirumab; Warburg effect.
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Glycolytic competence in gastric adenocarcinomas negatively impacts survival outcomes of patients treated with salvage paclitaxel-ramucirumab / Ruzzo, A; Graziano, F; Bagaloni, I; Di Bartolomeo, M; Prisciandaro, M; Aprile, G; Ongaro, E; Vincenzi, B; Perrone, G; Santini, D; Fornaro, L; Vivaldi, C; Tomasello, G; Loupakis, F; Lonardi, S; Fassan, M; Valmasoni, M; Sarti, D; Lorenzini, P; Catalano, V; Bisonni, R; Del Prete, M; Collina, G; Magnani, M. - In: GASTRIC CANCER. - ISSN 1436-3291. - 23:6(2020), pp. 1064-1074. [10.1007/s10120-020-01078-0 EA MAY 2020]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Ruzzo_Glycolytic_2020.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 1.1 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.1 MB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1642483
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 6
  • Scopus 6
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 6
social impact