4.7 Article

Urinary Exosomes from Bladder Cancer Patients Show a Residual Cancer Phenotype despite Complete Pathological Downstaging

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62753-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council VR [K2013-67X-15242-10-5, 2018-02806]
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation [2016/469]
  3. Cancer Research Foundations of Radiumhemmet [131082, 181103]
  4. Stockholm County Council [20140405]
  5. Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation [20140497, 20140711, 20130551]
  6. Cancer and Allergy Foundation
  7. KID grant of the Karolinska Institute
  8. Regional research committee in Uppsala-Orebro region (RFR in Uppsala-Orebro)
  9. Swedish Research Council
  10. Cancer Research Foundation in Norrland, Umea, Sweden
  11. Karolinska Institute
  12. Swedish Research Council [2018-02806] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Invasive urinary bladder cancer shows high recurrence rates after cystectomy even with apparent complete downstaging at cystectomy. Exosomes are nano-sized vesicles important in cell-cell communication, which have been hypothesized to contribute to cancer dissemination and recurrence. The aim of this study was to investigate if pro-carcinogenic exosomes could be detected in urine from histologically downstaged bladder cancer patients. 13 Patients were included in this study. Paired ureter and urine samples from nine patients underwent mass spectrometry, while samples from the remaining patients were used for exosome characterization. At cystectomy, exosomes were isolated from bladder and ureter urine, whereafter quantitative proteome profiling was performed. Urinary exosomes clustered based on whether they came from the bladder, with tumour contact, or the ureters, without tumour contact, even though all came from completely downstaged patients. Proteins overexpressed in exosomes derived from bladder urine contained several oncogenes and were mainly associated with tumour metabolism pathways. Although patients were histologically tumour-free at cystectomy, the bladder urine contained exosomes with a carcinogenic metabolic profile. This suggests a continuous release of exosomes from the bladder, which may promote recurrence at distant sites through metabolic rewiring, even after apparent complete downstaging. These exosomes, coming from either undetected cancer cells or partly transformed cells, are likely to increase the risk of metastasis and encourages cystectomy even in completely downstaged patients.

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