Original Article
A subset of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma patient-derived xenografts respond to cetuximab, which is predicted by high EGFR expression and amplification
Abstract
Background: Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is reportedly overexpressed in most esophageal tumors, but most targeted therapies showed no efficacy in non-selected patients. This study aims at investigating the adaptive cetuximab subset in a cohort of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) patient-derived xenografts (PDXs).
Methods: A large panel of ESCC PDXs has been established. The copy number, mRNA expression and immunohistochemistry (IHC) of key EGFR pathways have been examined along with cetuximab response. A preclinical trial on a randomly selected cohort of 16 ESCC PDXs was conducted, and the genomic annotations of these models were compared against the efficacy readout of the mouse trial.
Results: The trial identified that 7 of 16 (43.8%) responded to cetuximab (ΔT/ΔC <0 as responders). The gene amplification and expression analysis indicated that EGFR copy number ≥5 (P=0.035), high EGFR mRNA expression (P=0.001) and IHC score of 2–3 (P=0.034) are associated with tumor growth inhibition by cetuximab, suggesting EGFR may function as a single predictive biomarker for cetuximab response in ESCC.
Conclusions: Overall, our results suggest that an ESCC subtype with EGFR amplification and overexpression benefits from cetuximab treatment, which warrants further clinical confirmation.
Methods: A large panel of ESCC PDXs has been established. The copy number, mRNA expression and immunohistochemistry (IHC) of key EGFR pathways have been examined along with cetuximab response. A preclinical trial on a randomly selected cohort of 16 ESCC PDXs was conducted, and the genomic annotations of these models were compared against the efficacy readout of the mouse trial.
Results: The trial identified that 7 of 16 (43.8%) responded to cetuximab (ΔT/ΔC <0 as responders). The gene amplification and expression analysis indicated that EGFR copy number ≥5 (P=0.035), high EGFR mRNA expression (P=0.001) and IHC score of 2–3 (P=0.034) are associated with tumor growth inhibition by cetuximab, suggesting EGFR may function as a single predictive biomarker for cetuximab response in ESCC.
Conclusions: Overall, our results suggest that an ESCC subtype with EGFR amplification and overexpression benefits from cetuximab treatment, which warrants further clinical confirmation.