Steatohepatitis is associated with an increased 90-day mortality after hepatic surgery. In patients with hepatic CRM, the chemotherapy regimen should be carefully considered because the risk of hepatotoxicity is significant.
As for other types of malignancy, colorectal cancer is not a homogeneous disease but actually comprises multiple entities that vary in natural history and molecular pathogenesis. This heterogeneity explains why molecular cancer therapeutics against individual disease driver targets have proven to be effective in only a fraction of cases. One prototypical example is provided by the anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) monoclonal antibodies cetuximab and panitumumab, which are approved for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer. In unselected patients, the extent of clinical benefit from monotherapy with either drug hovers near the threshold for statistical significance, with response rates of approximately 10% ( 3-5 ).The population of potential responders has been recently enriched thanks to a biomarker-development strategy that is driven by the plausible biological rationale that constitutive activation of signaling pathways parallel to or downstream from EGFR, such as the RAS-RAF axis, should circumvent EGFR inhibition and therefore preclude sensitivity to EGFRtargeted agents ( 6 ). Indeed, the authors of both retrospective and prospective trials have convincingly demonstrated the inefficacy of EGFR-neutralizing antibodies in metastatic colorectal cancer patients with common (codons 12 and 13) KRAS mutations ( 7-12 ).Along this line, in a number of retrospective studies investigators have provided initial evidence that rare KRAS mutations as well as NRAS , BRAF , and (possibly) PIK3CA mutations also are significantly associated with low response rates ( 13-16 ). When considering the cumulative incidence of Only a fraction of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer receive clinical benefit from therapy with anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) antibodies, which calls for the identification of novel biomarkers for better personalized medicine. We produced large xenograft cohorts from 85 patient-derived, genetically characterized metastatic colorectal cancer samples ("xenopatients") to discover novel determinants of therapeutic response and new oncoprotein targets. Serially passaged tumors retained the morphologic and genomic features of their original counterparts. A validation trial confirmed the robustness of this approach: xenopatients responded to the anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab with rates and extents analogous to those observed in the clinic and could be prospectively stratified as responders or nonresponders on the basis of several predictive biomarkers. Genotype-response correlations indicated HER2 amplification specifically in a subset of cetuximab-resistant, KRAS/NRAS/BRAF/PIK3CA wild-type cases. Importantly, HER2 amplification was also enriched in clinically nonresponsive KRAS wild-type patients. A proof-of-concept, multiarm study in HER2-amplified xenopatients revealed that the combined inhibition of HER2 and EGFR induced overt, long-lasting tumor regression. Our results suggest promising therapeutic opportunities in cetuximab-resistant patients with metastatic colorectal ca...
We sought to develop criteria for ERBB2-positivity (HER2) in colorectal cancer to ensure accurate identification of ERBB2-amplified metastatic colorectal cancer patients suitable for enrolment in a phase II trial of ERBB2-targeted therapy (HERACLES trial). A two-step approach was used. In step 1, a consensus panel of pathologists adapted existing protocols for use in colorectal cancer to test ERBB2 expression and amplification. Collegial revision of an archival test cohort of colorectal cancer samples led to specific recommendations for adapting current breast and gastric cancer criteria for scoring ERBB2 in colorectal cancer. In step 2, from September 2012 to January 2015, colorectal-specific ERBB2 testing protocols and ERBB2 scoring criteria were used to centrally screen for ERBB2-positive KRAS wild-type colorectal cancer patients to be enrolled in the HERACLES trial (clinical validation cohort). In both archival test (N = 256) and clinical validation (N = 830) cohorts, a clinically sizeable 5% fraction of KRAS wild-type colorectal cancer patients was found to be ERBB2-positive according to the colorectal cancer-specific ERBB2 scoring criteria. ERBB2-positive tumors showed ERBB2 immunostaining consisting of intense membranous ERBB2 protein expression, corresponding to homogenous ERBB2 amplification, in 450% of cells. None of the immunohistochemistry 0 or 1+ cases was amplified. Concordance between SISH and FISH was 100%. In conclusion, we propose specific criteria for defining ERBB2-positivity in colorectal cancer (HERACLES Diagnostic Criteria). In a phase II trial of trastuzumab and lapatinib in a cetuximabresistant population, HERACLES Diagnostic Criteria shaped the selection of patients and defined ERBB2 as a predictive marker for response to ERBB2-targeted therapy in metastatic colorectal cancer.
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