4.8 Article

Characterization of ERG, AR and PTEN Gene Status in Circulating Tumor Cells from Patients with Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 69, Issue 7, Pages 2912-2918

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-08-3667

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Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK
  2. Experimental Cancer Medical Centre
  3. Department of Health [C51/A7401]
  4. Medical Research Council [G0601308]
  5. Royal Marsden Hospital General Research Council Fund
  6. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  7. ESMO fellowship
  8. Grand Charity of Freemasons
  9. National Cancer Research Institute Prostate Cancer Collaborative
  10. Terry Fox Foundation
  11. National Cancer Institute of Canada
  12. NIHR Biomedical Research Centre
  13. MRC [G0501019, G0601308] Funding Source: UKRI
  14. Medical Research Council [G0601308, G0501019] Funding Source: researchfish
  15. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2008-22-001] Funding Source: researchfish

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Hormone-driven expression of the ERG oncogene after fusion with TMPRSS2 occurs in 30% to 70% of therapy-naive prostate cancers. Its relevance in castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) remains controversial as ERG is not expressed in some TMPRSS2-ERG androgen-independent xenograft models. However, unlike these models, CRPC patients have an increasing prostate-specific antigen, indicating active androgen receptor signaling. Here, we collected blood every month from 89 patients (54 chemotherapy-naive patients and 35 docetaxel-treated patients) treated in phase I/phase II clinical trials of an orally available, highly specific CYP17 inhibitor, abiraterone acetate, that ablates the synthesis of androgens and estrogens that drive TMPRSS2-ERG fusions. We isolated circulating tumor cells (CTC) by anti-epithelial cell adhesion molecule immunomagnetic selection followed by cytokeratin and CD45 immunofluorescence and 4',6diamidino-2-phenylindole staining. We used multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization to show that CRPC CTCs, metastases, and prostate tissue invariably had the same ERG gene status as therapy-naive tumors (n = 31). We then used quantitative reverse transcription-PCR to show that ERG expression was maintained in CRPC. We also observed homogeneity in ERG gene rearrangement status in CTCs (n = 48) in contrast to significant heterogeneity of AR copy number gain and PTEN loss, suggesting that rearrangement of ERG may be an earlier event in prostate carcinogenesis. We finally report a significant association between ERG rearrangements in therapy-naive tumors, CRPCs, and CTCs and magnitude of prostate-specific antigen decline (P = 0.007) in CRPC patients treated with abiraterone acetate. These data confirm that CTCs are malignant in origin and indicate that hormone-regulated expression

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