Molecular alterations associated with bladder cancer initiation and progression.

Carlos Cordon-Cardo
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引用次数: 123

Abstract

Bladder cancer is the fifth most commonly diagnosed non-cutaneous solid malignancy, and the second most commonly diagnosed genitourinary malignancy amongst people living in the United States, where it is estimated that more than 61,000 new cases of bladder cancer will be diagnosed in the year 2008. Approximately 90% of malignant tumors arising in the urinary bladder are of epithelial origin, the majority being transitional cell carcinomas. Early stage bladder tumors have been classified into two groups with distinct behavior and unique molecular profiles: low grade tumors (always papillary and usually superficial), and high-grade tumors (either papillary or non-papillary, and often invasive). Clinically, superficial bladder tumors (stages Ta and Tis) account for 75% to 85% of neoplasms, while the remaining 15% to 25% are invasive (T1, T2-T4) or metastatic lesions at the time of initial presentation. Studies from the author's group and others have revealed that distinct genotypic and phenotypic patterns are associated with early versus late stages of bladder cancer. Most importantly, early superficial diseases appear to segregate into two main pathways. Superficial papillary bladder tumors are characterized by gain-of-function mutations, mainly affecting classical oncogenes such as RAS and FGFR3. Deletions of chromosome 9, mainly allelic losses on the long arm (9q) are also frequent events in these tumors. Such genetic alterations are observed in most if not all superficial papillary non-invasive tumors (Ta), but only in a small subset of invasive bladder neoplasms. Flat carcinoma in situ (Tis) and invasive tumors are characterized by loss-of-function mutations, affecting the prototype tumor suppressor genes, including p53, RB and PTEN. These alterations are absent or very rare in the Ta tumors analyzed, but have been frequently identified in invasive bladder carcinomas. Based on these data, a novel model for bladder tumor progression has been proposed in which two separate genetic pathways characterize the evolution of superficial bladder neoplasms. Numerous individual molecular markers have been identified in the tissue specimens that correlate to some extent with tumor stage, and possibly with prognosis in bladder cancer. However, these molecular prognosticators do not play a role in the clinical routine management of patients with bladder tumors, mainly due to lack of large prospective validation studies. Thus, the need for development of specific tissue and serum tumor markers for prognostic stratification remains. The advent of high-throughput microarrays technologies allows comprehensive discovery of targets relevant in bladder cancer progression, which could be translated into new approaches for drug and biomarker development. Further investigation is warranted to define novel biomarkers specific for bladder cancer patients based on the molecular alterations of tumor progression, and multiplexed strategies for clinical management.

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膀胱癌发生和发展的分子改变。
在美国,膀胱癌是第五大最常诊断的非皮肤实体恶性肿瘤,第二大最常诊断的泌尿生殖系统恶性肿瘤,据估计,2008年将诊断出超过61,000例膀胱癌新病例。大约90%发生在膀胱的恶性肿瘤是上皮性的,大多数是移行细胞癌。早期膀胱肿瘤被分为两组,具有不同的行为和独特的分子特征:低级别肿瘤(通常为乳突状,通常为浅表性)和高级别肿瘤(乳突状或非乳突状,通常为侵袭性)。临床上,浅表性膀胱肿瘤(Ta期和Tis期)占肿瘤的75% ~ 85%,其余15% ~ 25%为侵袭性(T1期、t2期~ t4期)或首发时的转移性病变。作者小组和其他人的研究表明,不同的基因型和表型模式与膀胱癌的早期和晚期有关。最重要的是,早期浅表疾病似乎分为两种主要途径。浅表乳头状膀胱肿瘤以功能获得突变为特征,主要影响RAS和FGFR3等经典癌基因。9号染色体的缺失,主要是长臂(9q)上的等位基因丢失,也是这些肿瘤中常见的事件。这种基因改变在大多数(如果不是全部)浅表乳头状非侵袭性肿瘤(Ta)中观察到,但仅在一小部分浸润性膀胱肿瘤中观察到。扁平原位癌(Tis)和侵袭性肿瘤的特征是功能缺失突变,影响了包括p53、RB和PTEN在内的原型肿瘤抑制基因。这些改变在分析的Ta肿瘤中不存在或非常罕见,但在浸润性膀胱癌中经常发现。基于这些数据,我们提出了一种新的膀胱肿瘤发展模型,其中两种不同的遗传途径表征了浅表性膀胱肿瘤的进化。在膀胱癌的组织标本中发现了许多个体分子标记物,这些分子标记物在一定程度上与肿瘤分期相关,并可能与预后相关。然而,这些分子预测因子并未在膀胱肿瘤患者的临床常规管理中发挥作用,主要原因是缺乏大规模的前瞻性验证研究。因此,发展特异的组织和血清肿瘤标志物用于预后分层的需求仍然存在。高通量微阵列技术的出现使膀胱癌进展相关靶点的全面发现成为可能,这可能转化为药物和生物标志物开发的新方法。基于肿瘤进展的分子改变和临床管理的多重策略,需要进一步的研究来定义新的膀胱癌患者特异性生物标志物。
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Orchiectomy. Bacterial vaginosis. Bladder cancer: from pathogenesis to prevention. Chairmen's summary. The epidemiology of bladder cancer in Russia.
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